Neurobiological perspectives on the nature of visual and verbal processes

Wyer and colleagues in this issue summarize an array of studies that demonstrate varied and significant effects of a series of antecedents on the relative accessibility of visual and verbal strategies in memory and the ease with which these strategies can be employed to affect comprehension and judg...

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Published in:Journal of consumer psychology 2008-10, Vol.18 (4), p.264-269
Main Authors: Childers, Terry L., Jiang, Yang
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Language:eng
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title Neurobiological perspectives on the nature of visual and verbal processes
format Article
creator Childers, Terry L.
Jiang, Yang
subjects Accessibility
Brain
Event related brain potentials
Neuroimaging
Psychophysiological aspects
RESEARCH DIALOGUES
Verbal memory
ispartof Journal of consumer psychology, 2008-10, Vol.18 (4), p.264-269
description Wyer and colleagues in this issue summarize an array of studies that demonstrate varied and significant effects of a series of antecedents on the relative accessibility of visual and verbal strategies in memory and the ease with which these strategies can be employed to affect comprehension and judgments. We review the studies in light of findings and perspectives from psychophysiological and neuroimaging research. We discuss how measurement of event-related potentials (ERP) can illuminate automatic versus reflective forms of processes. Then the revelation of brain regions involved in the visual processing of pictures and words under different tasks and processes by functional brain imaging (e.g. functional MRI). We close by considering these bio-behavioral perspectives and the interactions among modality, task, and affect on visual and verbal encoding strategies among individuals differing in visual and verbal processing orientations.
language eng
source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); ScienceDirect - Connect here FIRST to enable access; JSTOR
identifier ISSN: 1057-7408
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1532-7663
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