Mental simulation of four visual object properties: similarities and differences as assessed by the sentence-picture verification task

In the sentence-picture verification (SPV) task, people read sentences implying the shape/size/colour/orientation of objects. They then verify whether pictured objects, which either match or mismatch the implied visual information mentioned in the sentence. Faster verification times on matching tria...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of cognitive psychology (Hove, England) Vol. 29; no. 4; pp. 420 - 432
Main Authors de Koning, Björn B., Wassenburg, Stephanie I., Bos, Lisanne T., van der Schoot, Menno
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hove Routledge 19.05.2017
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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ISSN2044-5911
2044-592X
DOI10.1080/20445911.2017.1281283

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Summary:In the sentence-picture verification (SPV) task, people read sentences implying the shape/size/colour/orientation of objects. They then verify whether pictured objects, which either match or mismatch the implied visual information mentioned in the sentence. Faster verification times on matching trials (match advantage) are considered supportive to the notion that readers perform mental simulations during sentence comprehension. This study advances this work by applying a within-subjects design to the SPV-task, enabling us to directly address the strength of and correlation between the match advantages for the properties shape, size, colour, and orientation. Results showed varying match advantages with colour showing the strongest effect, and no match advantage for orientation. Shape, size, and colour were significantly correlated, whereas there were no significant correlations with orientation. These findings suggest that interpretations of match advantages could benefit from a re-evaluation of mental simulation accountsby distinguishing between intrinsic (shape, size, and colour) and extrinsic (orientation) object properties.
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ISSN:2044-5911
2044-592X
DOI:10.1080/20445911.2017.1281283