Several studies have reported that spontaneous eye movements occur with visuospatial imagery and that they closely reflect content and spatial relations from an original picture or scene during episodic memory retrieval (e.g., Brandt& Stark, 1997; Johansson, et al., 2006). Nevertheless, the role for these eye movements to “nothing” is elusive and has been debated extensively in current research (cf., Ferreira et al., 2008; Richardson et al., 2009). Do they have an active and functional role when visuospatial information is retrieved from memory or are they merely an epiphenomenon which does not interact with mnemonic mechanisms in any useful way? The present study was designed to address this fundamental issue by investigating how imposing ...
The present research examined whether eye movements during retrieval capture the rela-tion between a...
We investigated how eye gaze patterns are implicated in the perception and memory of scenes. Firstly...
A large body of research suggests that when we retrieve visual information from memory, we look back...
Several studies have reported that spontaneous eye movements occur with visual imagery and that they...
Abstract in Undetermined Whilst it has been established that spontaneous eye movements occur with vi...
Research on episodic memory has established that spontaneous eye movements occur to spaces associate...
This thesis investigates the relationship between eye movements, mental imagery and memory retrieval...
When recalling something you have previously read, to what degree will such episodic remembering act...
The memories we form are determined by what we attend to, and conversely, what we attend to is influ...
Eye movements support memory encoding by binding distinct elements of the visual world into coherent...
Eye movements have been shown to benefit the encoding and retrieval of memories in laboratory experi...
Two experiments examining effects of eye movements on episodic memory retrieval are reported. Thirty...
Previous research has established that when engaged in episodic memory retrieval, people frequently ...
When we bring to mind something we have seen before, our eyes spontaneously unfold in a sequential p...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>The ability to recall and manipulate information abo...
The present research examined whether eye movements during retrieval capture the rela-tion between a...
We investigated how eye gaze patterns are implicated in the perception and memory of scenes. Firstly...
A large body of research suggests that when we retrieve visual information from memory, we look back...
Several studies have reported that spontaneous eye movements occur with visual imagery and that they...
Abstract in Undetermined Whilst it has been established that spontaneous eye movements occur with vi...
Research on episodic memory has established that spontaneous eye movements occur to spaces associate...
This thesis investigates the relationship between eye movements, mental imagery and memory retrieval...
When recalling something you have previously read, to what degree will such episodic remembering act...
The memories we form are determined by what we attend to, and conversely, what we attend to is influ...
Eye movements support memory encoding by binding distinct elements of the visual world into coherent...
Eye movements have been shown to benefit the encoding and retrieval of memories in laboratory experi...
Two experiments examining effects of eye movements on episodic memory retrieval are reported. Thirty...
Previous research has established that when engaged in episodic memory retrieval, people frequently ...
When we bring to mind something we have seen before, our eyes spontaneously unfold in a sequential p...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>The ability to recall and manipulate information abo...
The present research examined whether eye movements during retrieval capture the rela-tion between a...
We investigated how eye gaze patterns are implicated in the perception and memory of scenes. Firstly...
A large body of research suggests that when we retrieve visual information from memory, we look back...