Abstract

Research studies in psychology typically use two-dimensional (2D) images of objects as proxies for real-world three-dimensional (3D) stimuli. There are, however, a number of important differences between real objects and images that could influence cognition and behavior. Although human memory has been studied extensively, only a handful of studies have used real objects in the context of memory and virtually none have directly compared memory for real objects vs. their 2D counterparts. Here we examined whether or not episodic memory is influenced by the format in which objects are displayed. We conducted two experiments asking participants to freely recall, and to recognize, a set of 44 common household objects. Critically, the exemplars were displayed to observers in one of three viewing conditions: real-world objects, colored photographs, or black and white line drawings. Stimuli were closely matched across conditions for size, orientation, and illumination. Surprisingly, recall and recognition performance was significantly better for real objects compared to colored photographs or line drawings (for which memory performance was equivalent). We replicated this pattern in a second experiment comparing memory for real objects vs. color photos, when the stimuli were matched for viewing angle across conditions. Again, recall and recognition performance was significantly better for the real objects than matched color photos of the same items. Taken together, our data suggest that real objects are more memorable than pictorial stimuli. Our results highlight the importance of studying real-world object cognition and raise the potential for applied use in developing effective strategies for education, marketing, and further research on object-related cognition.

Highlights

  • Our current scientific knowledge in areas such as human visual perception, attention, and memory, is founded almost exclusively on experiments that rely upon 2D image presentations

  • Recall responses for one subject were absent from the color photograph condition, and so the data were analyzed with subjects in the line drawing and real object groups, and for color photographs

  • We compared episodic memory for everyday household objects that were viewed as real 3D objects vs. 2D pictures

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Summary

Introduction

Our current scientific knowledge in areas such as human visual perception, attention, and memory, is founded almost exclusively on experiments that rely upon 2D image presentations. The human visuomotor system has largely evolved to perceive and interact with real objects and environments, not images (Gibson, 1979; Norman, 2002). In the domain of human memory, studies have used real world objects (e.g., Dirks and Neisser, 1977; Mandler et al, 1977; Pezdek et al, 1986; Droll and Eckstein, 2009), but to our knowledge none have examined whether memory performance is superior for real objects vs matched image displays. Real objects may have a memory advantage that is important to consider, both for empirical reasons, and because of the potential benefits in other domains—such as education and marketing

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