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Mental Imagery PDF

191 Pages·1969·6.464 MB·English
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MENTALIMAGERY MENTAL IMAGERY ALAN RICHARDSON Springer Science+Business Media, LLC ISBN 978-3-662-37109-1 ISBN 978-3-662-37817-5 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-3-662-37817-5 © Alan Richardson 1969 Originally published by Springer Publishing Company, Inc. in 1969. Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1s t edition 1969 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 70-789 I 3 To My Mother and Father 'It is a fascinating study in the psychology ofthe scientific mind to note the curious fluctuations in its interests from one decade to another . . . At one time much work will be motivated by a particular interest, then another topic comes to the fore; later on another still. By the time that the first topic is focused again it is necessary to modify the treatment of it by the new dis coveries made in other fields. This is what has happened concerning the doctrine ofthe image.' Downey, I929, p. 35 CONTENTS Foreword ix I DEFINING MENTAL IMAGERY 1 2 AFTER-IMAGERY 13 3 EIDETIC IMAGERY 29 4 MEMORY IMAGERY 43 5 IMAGINATION IMAGERY 93 6 CONCLUSIONS AND SPECULATIONS 127 Appendices 148 References 157 Name Index 171 Subject Index 176 Vll FOREWORD IT IS the purpose of this book to bring together in one place a representative sam pIe of facts and hypotheses concerning the phenomena of mental imagery. The time seems to be appro priate for such an attempt, and it is hoped that it will serve as a guide to research in this field until a more comprehensive treatment becomes availabie. The field covered under the heading of mental imagery is a Iarge one and relevant material spans the entire history of experimental psychology. In 1860 Gustav Fechner (1966) dis cussed the topic in his book on the Elements of Psychophysics. In 1880, at the very beginning of research into the nature of individual differences, Francis Galton carried out a statistical investigation into the varieties of imagery reported by school boys, artists, scientists and statesmen. From the days of Wilhelm Wundt at Leipzig to the end of Edward Bradford Titchener's time at Cornell University, the image constituted a basic theoretical element in the psycho logical system of the structuralists, but with the decline of structuralism and the growth of behaviourism in the 1920'S, mental imagery began to fade as a serious subject for investi gation and completely disappeared as a theoretical construct. Only a few intrepid characters like Emeritus Professor T. H. Pear of Manchester University continued to talk and write about imagery during the great eclipse (Pear, 1927, 1935, 1937; Kerr and Pear, 1931). From the Iate 1920'S till the Iate 1940's the attention of most academic psychologists in the English speaking world was focused upon other problems, notably upon theoretical issues in the field of learning. However, from the early 1950'S until the present time academic psychology has expanded its range of research enor mously, and one of the areas which has shown an extra ordinarily vigorous growth is that concerning cognitive processes, of which the activity of imaging is one. IX FOREWORD Many theoretical and practical problems have contributed to this revival of interest, and in his article on 'Imagery: the Return of the Ostracized' Robert Holt (1964) provides a vivid account of their nature. In writing of the practical problems of an ergonomie kind, he cites the examples of: 'Radar operators who have to monitor a scope for long periods ; long-distance truck drivers in night runs over turnpikes, but also victims of "highway hypnosis"; jet pHots flying straight and level at high altitudes; operators ofsnowcats and other such vehicles ofpolar exploration, when surrounded by snow storms-all of these persons have been troubled by the emergence into conscious ness of vivid imagery, largely visual but often kinaesthetic or auditory, which they may take momentarily for reality.' In the situations just described the emergence of imagination imagery is potentially dangerous, and an understanding of the conditions of its occurrence is necessary if it is to be controlled or eliminated. But like most other events, the spontaneous emergence of imagination imagery has a positive as weIl as a negative side. Imagination imagery has traditionally been associated with acts of creation, particularly during the illumi nation phase, and it seems reasonable to expect that a more exact study of the part played by mental imagery, of all kinds, in the processes of creation will increase our knowledge of this highly valued activity and its products. Practical problems of the kind outlined raise theoretical issues, both within psychology and within allied disciplines like neurophysiology. Within psychology, for example, there has been an increase of interest in the place of mental imagery in the general process of cognitive development (e.g. Werner and Kaplan, 1963; Bruner, et al., 1966). Within neurophysiology the reports of imagery that have accompanied stimulation of points on the exposed temporal cortex of epileptic patients have aroused considerable theoretical interest (Penfield and Roberts, 1959). What kind of brain mechanisms mediate the retention and recovery of these strips of vivid quasi-sensory and affective memories? To get some perspective on the nature ofmental imagery and the theoretical, practical and methodological problems that are raised by its existence, a considerable range of literature has been examined; but relevant research and discussion on mental imagery have appeared in a wide variety oflanguages and in an x FOREWORD even wider variety ofj ournals, so that the task of covering it all, with even partial completeness, has been a difficult one. The task is made more difficult by the long time span of more than 100 years and the absence of any systematic reviews of the literature. The effect of these difficulties has been to bias the selection of material in some known and some unknown ways. Most of the literature cited has been published in English; most often this has been the original language of publication but sometimes it has been the result oftranslation. Writers who have been primarily philosophical, psychopharmacological or neuro-physiological in their interests are very poorly repre sented, as are psychologists whose accounts have been mainly anecdotal. In addition it will be noted that certain traditional topics, such as the relation of mental imagery to literature or to education, have been almost completely ignored. What has been deliberately included has been as much empirical material of a behavioural and experiential kind (Richardson, 1965) as relates to the nature of imagery qua imagery and as relates to the part played by imagery in such other cognitive processes as perception, remembering and thinking. In addition, a considerable amount of space has been devoted to the consideration of methodological issues, especially the difficult but crucial problem of finding objective neuro logical, physiological or behavioural indices that parallel sub jective reports of mental imagery or in so me other way provide checks upon the accuracy or utility of such reports. The first chapter of this book takes up the problem of defining mental imagery so that all subclasses of imagery would be encompassed. In the four chapters that follow, each major subclass of imagery has been discussed in turn: after imagery and related phenomena, eidetic imagery, memory imagery, and lastly, imagination imagery. The final chapter attempts abrief restatement concerning the two major phenomenal attributes of mental imagery-vividness and controllability-and then goes on to discuss some particular cognitive problems in which the process of imaging is involved. Acknowledgements are due to many colleagues and friends in Australia and overseas who were kind enough to comment on a first draft of this book. In particular I would like to thank: A. J. Marshall, J. Ross and J. Lumsden from the University of Western Australia; R. R. Brown from the Australian National Xl

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