4.6 Article

Melting Ice With Your Mind: Representational Momentum for Physical States

期刊

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
卷 33, 期 5, 页码 725-735

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/09567976211051744

关键词

state changes; intuitive physics; event cognition; memory distortion; visual memory; open data; open materials; preregistered

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [BCS-2021053]
  2. National Science Foundation Directorate for Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences (SBE) Postdoctoral Research Fellowship [SMA-2105228]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates mental representations of objects undergoing state changes, finding that individuals tend to remember the changes as more extreme than they actually were. This pattern applies to various types of state changes and aligns with their natural trajectories in state space.
When a log burns, it transforms from a block of wood into a pile of ash. Such state changes are among the most dramatic ways objects change, going beyond mere changes of position or orientation. How does the mind represent changes of state? A foundational result in visual cognition is that memory extrapolates the positions of moving objects-a distortion called representational momentum. Here, five experiments (N = 400 adults) exploited this phenomenon to investigate mental representations in state space. Participants who viewed objects undergoing state changes (e.g., ice melting, logs burning, or grapes shriveling) remembered them as more changed (e.g., more melted, burned, or shriveled) than they actually were. This pattern extended to several types of state changes, went beyond their low-level properties, and even adhered to their natural trajectories in state space. Thus, mental representations of objects actively incorporate how they change-not only in their relation to their environment, but also in their essential qualities.

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