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Journal ArticleDOI

Time to understand pictures and words

Mary C. Potter, +1 more
- 06 Feb 1975 - 
- Vol. 253, Iss: 5491, pp 437-438
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TLDR
Here it is confirmed that naming a drawing of an object takes much longer than reading its name, but it is shown that deciding whether the object is in a given category such as ‘furniture’ takes slightly less time for a drawing than for a word, a result that seems to be inconsistent with the second view.
Abstract
WHEN an object such as a chair is presented visually, or is represented by a line drawing, a spoken word, or a written word, the initial stages in the process leading to understanding are clearly different in each case. There is disagreement, however, about whether those early stages lead to a common abstract representation in memory, the idea of a chair1–4, or to two separate representations, one verbal (common to spoken and written words), and the other image-like5. The first view claims that words and images are associated with ideas, but the underlying representation of an idea is abstract. According to the second view, the verbal representation alone is directly associated with abstract information about an object (for example, its superordinate category: furniture). Concrete perceptual information (for example, characteristic shape, colour or size) is associated with the imaginal representation. Translation from one representation to the other takes time, on the second view, which accounts for the observation that naming a line drawing takes longer than naming (reading aloud) a written word6,7. Here we confirm that naming a drawing of an object takes much longer than reading its name, but we show that deciding whether the object is in a given category such as ‘furniture’ takes slightly less time for a drawing than for a word, a result that seems to be inconsistent with the second view.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

On Naming a Giraffe a Zebra: Picture Naming Errors Across Different Object Categories

TL;DR: In this article, a cascade model of picture naming was used to examine the interference effects of categorically related primes on the naming of picture targets and found that the names of visual + semantic primes occurred as perseverative responses to objects from both category types.
Journal ArticleDOI

The picture superiority effect in associative recognition.

TL;DR: The picture superiority effect extends to associative recognition and is seen in a greater hit rate for intact picture pairs, but there was no difference in the false alarm rates for the two types of stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-spatial extinction following lesions of the parietal lobe in humans

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that extinction need not be spatial in nature, but may be determined by characteristics of the objects to be selected, and suggested that selection of objects for action requires that the 'winners' produced by the independent competitive biases for selection are bound together within distinct neural areas concerned with object properties and space.
Journal ArticleDOI

An interactive activation approach to object processing: effects of structural similarity, name frequency, and task in normality and pathology.

TL;DR: A computational model of the processes involved in retrieving stored semantic and name information from objects, using a simple interactive activation and competition architecture, finds evidence showing a cross-over in normal reaction times to make semantic classification and identification responses to objects from categories with either structurally similar or structurally dissimilar exemplars.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition from semantically related primes: evidence of a category-specific inhibition.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the phenomenon of inhibition from generating successive items within a category, reported by A. S. Brown (1981), was examined in two experiments, where subjects responded on target trials by either generating targets or reading them.
References
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Book

Human Associative Memory

TL;DR: In this paper, a theory about human memory, about how a person encodes, retains, and retrieves information from memory, was proposed and tested, based on the HAM theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lexical Access and Naming Time.

TL;DR: The authors found a positive correlation between naming times and lexical decision times for words, but not for nonwords, indicating that word naming occurred as a result of a lexical search procedure, rather than occurring prior to lexical searching.
Journal ArticleDOI

A model for reading, naming and comparison

TL;DR: The basic model has been elaborated to include separate access and exit channels for verbal and pictorial stimuli, which will be involved when a word or object is assigned an abstract interpretation, or when names or graphic responses are initiated.
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