
@article{ref1,
title="Priming and recognition of transformed three-dimensional objects: effects of size and reflection",
journal="Journal of experimental psychology: learning, memory, and cognition",
year="1992",
author="Cooper, L. A. and Schacter, D. L. and Ballesteros, Salomé and Moore, Christine",
volume="18",
number="1",
pages="43-57",
abstract="In 2 experiments exploring memory for unfamiliar 3-dimensional objects, Ss studied drawings under conditions that encouraged encoding of global object structure. Implicit memory for objects was assessed by a judgment of structural possibility; explicit memory was assessed by recognition. The principal manipulation was the relationship between the sizes or the left-right parities of the studied and tested objects. Priming was observed on the possible-impossible object decision task despite transformations of size or reflection. Recognition, by contrast, was significantly impaired by the transformations. These results suggest that a structural description system constructs representations of objects invariant over size and reflection, whereas a separable episodic system encodes these transformations as properties of an object's distinctive representation in memory.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0278-7393",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}