Object imagery and object identification: object imagers are better at identifying spatially-filtered visual objects |
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Authors: | Manila Vannucci Giuliana Mazzoni Carlo Chiorri Lavinia Cioli |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Psychology, University of Florence, Via S. Niccolò 93, 50125 Florence, Italy;(2) Department of Psychology, University of Hull, Hull, UK;(3) Department of Anthropological Sciences, Psychology Unit, University of Genoa, Genoa, Italy |
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Abstract: | Object imagery refers to the ability to construct pictorial images of objects. Individuals with high object imagery (high-OI) produce more vivid mental images than individuals with low object imagery (low-OI), and they encode and process both mental images and visual stimuli in a more global and holistic way. In the present study, we investigated whether and how level of object imagery may affect the way in which individuals identify visual objects. High-OI and low-OI participants were asked to perform a visual identification task with spatially-filtered pictures of real objects. Each picture was presented at nine levels of filtering, starting from the most blurred (level 1: only low spatial frequencies—global configuration) and gradually adding high spatial frequencies up to the complete version (level 9: global configuration plus local and internal details). Our data showed that high-OI participants identified stimuli at a lower level of filtering than participants with low-OI, indicating that they were better able than low-OI participants to identify visual objects at lower spatial frequencies. Implications of the results and future developments are discussed. |
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Keywords: | Mental imagery Object imagery Visual object identification Spatial frequency |
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