Seeing a person preparing to perform an action and later remembering having seen subsequent phases of the action, but not previous phases. This is what a theory on the role of the motor system in the creation and recovery of memories predicts can happen. We investigate memory for action after viewing an image representing an actor acting on a series of everyday objects. The participants in one experiment viewed a series of still photos of unfolding actions on objects (e.g., blowing the nose), and 15 minutes later they were asked to complete a recognition task. At recognition, participants viewed photos representing temporally distant moments, backward or forward in time compared to the original, along with the same photos seen at encoding. Results showed that participants tended to accept forward photos more than backward photos. In a pilot study, we explored the role of the temporal distance between encoding and recognition. Results showed that when 3 days elapsed between the encoding and recognition phases, participants did not tend to accept forward photos more than backward photos.

False Memories of Actions: When Motor Simulation is Deceptive / Limata, Teresa; Stockner, Mara; Mitaritonna, Danilo; Mazzoni, Giuliana; Bucciarelli, Monica; Ianì, Francesco. - (2024). (Intervento presentato al convegno Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society tenutosi a Rotterdam).

False Memories of Actions: When Motor Simulation is Deceptive

Mara Stockner;Danilo Mitaritonna;Giuliana Mazzoni;
2024

Abstract

Seeing a person preparing to perform an action and later remembering having seen subsequent phases of the action, but not previous phases. This is what a theory on the role of the motor system in the creation and recovery of memories predicts can happen. We investigate memory for action after viewing an image representing an actor acting on a series of everyday objects. The participants in one experiment viewed a series of still photos of unfolding actions on objects (e.g., blowing the nose), and 15 minutes later they were asked to complete a recognition task. At recognition, participants viewed photos representing temporally distant moments, backward or forward in time compared to the original, along with the same photos seen at encoding. Results showed that participants tended to accept forward photos more than backward photos. In a pilot study, we explored the role of the temporal distance between encoding and recognition. Results showed that when 3 days elapsed between the encoding and recognition phases, participants did not tend to accept forward photos more than backward photos.
2024
Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society
false memories; action; kinematic mental simulation; motor system
04 Pubblicazione in atti di convegno::04b Atto di convegno in volume
False Memories of Actions: When Motor Simulation is Deceptive / Limata, Teresa; Stockner, Mara; Mitaritonna, Danilo; Mazzoni, Giuliana; Bucciarelli, Monica; Ianì, Francesco. - (2024). (Intervento presentato al convegno Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society tenutosi a Rotterdam).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1725410
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