Boundary extension is a tendency to remember close-up scenes as if they extended beyond the occluding boundaries. The authors explored the contributing factors using brief retention intervals and computer-generated images. Boundary extension turns out to be more complex than previously thought and is not linked to the effects of image magnification and field-of-view changes. Although this is consistent with the idea that boundary extension is the product of the activation of a mental schema that provides information of what is likely to exist outside the picture boundaries, the authors also found that properties of the object at the center of the picture can affect boundary extension independently of the information at the boundaries. In a ...
What distinguishes scenes from nonscenes? Photographs of objects on both naturalistic and blank back...
When observing and remembering a scene, memory errors can occur, one of them being the boundary exte...
Boundary extension is a memory phenomenon in which an individual reports seeing more of a scene than...
Boundary extension is a perceptual phenomenon in which people remember more of a scene than they act...
International audienceCoined by Intraub and Richardson in 1989, boundary extension phenomenon refers...
Boundary extension is a robust scene perception phenomenon in which observers erroneously remember s...
A scene is never perceived in its entirety. The input for scene comprehension is always a partial vi...
One of the most compelling phenomena in visual memory is the Boundary Extension (BE) which is the t...
Publisher's PDFAfter viewing a scene, people often remember having seen more of the world than was o...
Boundary extension is a common false memory error, in which people confidently remember seeing a wid...
Ss tend to remember close-up photographs as having had extended boundaries (Intraub & Richardson...
To allow perception of a continuous world, cor-tical mechanisms extrapolate missing informa-tion wit...
Boundary extension (BE) is a phenomenon in which the boundary of a picture is reportedly extended in...
SummaryTo allow perception of a continuous world, cortical mechanisms extrapolate missing informatio...
Boundary Extension (BE; Intraub Richardson, 1989, JEP:LMC, 15, 179-187) refers to a memory distortio...
What distinguishes scenes from nonscenes? Photographs of objects on both naturalistic and blank back...
When observing and remembering a scene, memory errors can occur, one of them being the boundary exte...
Boundary extension is a memory phenomenon in which an individual reports seeing more of a scene than...
Boundary extension is a perceptual phenomenon in which people remember more of a scene than they act...
International audienceCoined by Intraub and Richardson in 1989, boundary extension phenomenon refers...
Boundary extension is a robust scene perception phenomenon in which observers erroneously remember s...
A scene is never perceived in its entirety. The input for scene comprehension is always a partial vi...
One of the most compelling phenomena in visual memory is the Boundary Extension (BE) which is the t...
Publisher's PDFAfter viewing a scene, people often remember having seen more of the world than was o...
Boundary extension is a common false memory error, in which people confidently remember seeing a wid...
Ss tend to remember close-up photographs as having had extended boundaries (Intraub & Richardson...
To allow perception of a continuous world, cor-tical mechanisms extrapolate missing informa-tion wit...
Boundary extension (BE) is a phenomenon in which the boundary of a picture is reportedly extended in...
SummaryTo allow perception of a continuous world, cortical mechanisms extrapolate missing informatio...
Boundary Extension (BE; Intraub Richardson, 1989, JEP:LMC, 15, 179-187) refers to a memory distortio...
What distinguishes scenes from nonscenes? Photographs of objects on both naturalistic and blank back...
When observing and remembering a scene, memory errors can occur, one of them being the boundary exte...
Boundary extension is a memory phenomenon in which an individual reports seeing more of a scene than...