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Our need for associative coherence

Psychology

Our need for associative coherence

Y. Afiki and M. Bar

This groundbreaking research by Yael Afiki and Moshe Bar reveals how associative coherence significantly impacts visual perception. By examining performance on various visual tasks after viewing associated versus non-associated images, the study uncovers the cognitive load imposed by our search for coherence, affecting even basic perceptual abilities.... show more
Abstract
The world around us consists of typical settings manifested as statistical regularities and stored as associations. These associations are beneficial for performance, and we rely on them as a source of stability in our perception of a coherent surrounding. What happens when such associativity is not apparent? We presented pairs of associated images and pairs of non-associated images and compared their corresponding effect on subsequent performance in three different visual perception paradigms: contrast-sensitivity, global vs. local perception, and critical-flicker-fusion. In all three experiments, performance was significantly inferior when preceded by images with no clear associative connection. We propose that these results reflect the need to find coherence in our environment. When such coherence is not easily detected, we seem to persist in seeking for it, which in turn poses a lingering cognitive load that taxes performance even in low-level perception.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Sep 03, 2020
Authors
Yael Afiki, Moshe Bar
Tags
associative coherence
visual perception
cognitive load
contrast sensitivity
critical flicker fusion
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