Abstract
We investigated the effects of visual input at encoding and retrieval on the phenomenology of memory. In Experiment 1, participants took part in events with and without wearing blindfolds, and later were shown a video of the events. Blindfolding, as well as later viewing of the video, both tended to decrease recollection. In Experiment 2, participants were played videos, with and without the visual component, of events involving other people. Events listened to without visual input were recalled with less recollection; later adding of the visual component increased recollection. In Experiment 3, participants were provided with progressively more information about events that they had experienced, either in the form of photographs that they had taken of the events or narrative descriptions of those photographs. In comparison with manipulations at encoding, the addition of more visual or narrative cues at recall had similar but smaller effects on recollection.
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Support for this research was provided by Marsden Grant MS1012 to C.D.B.B. and an Erskine Fellowship from the University of Canterbury to D.C.R.
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Rubin, D.C., Burt, C.D.B. & Fifield, S.J. Experimental manipulations of the phenomenology of memory. Memory & Cognition 31, 877–886 (2003). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03196442
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03196442