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Content,not context,facilitates memory for real-world scenes
Authors:Claudia Damiano  Dirk B. Walther
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canadaclaudia.damiano@mail.utoronto.ca;3. Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Can eye movements tell us whether people will remember a scene? In order to investigate the link between eye movements and memory encoding and retrieval, we asked participants to study photographs of real-world scenes while their eye movements were being tracked. We found eye gaze patterns during study to be predictive of subsequent memory for scenes. Moreover, gaze patterns during study were more similar to gaze patterns during test for remembered than for forgotten scenes. Thus, eye movements are indeed indicative of scene memory. In an explicit test for context effects of eye movements on memory, we found recognition rate to be unaffected by the disruption of spatial and/or temporal context of repeated eye movements. Therefore, we conclude that eye movements cue memory by selecting and accessing the most relevant scene content, regardless of its spatial location within the scene or the order in which it was selected.
Keywords:Eye movements  Scene recognition  Memory
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