Visual memory describes the relationship between perceptual processing and the encoding, storage and retrieval of the resulting neural representations.
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Visual memory describes the relationship between perceptual processing and the encoding, storage and retrieval of the resulting neural representations.
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Visual memory occurs over a broad time range spanning from eye movements to years in order to visually navigate to a previously visited location.
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Visual memory is a form of memory which preserves some characteristics of our senses pertaining to visual experience.
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The experience of visual memory is referred to as the mind's eye through which we can retrieve from our memory a mental image of original objects, places, animals or people.
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Visual memory is one of several cognitive systems, which are all interconnected parts that combine to form the human memory.
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Visual short term memory is the capacity for holding a small amount of visual information in mind in an active, readily available state for a short period of time .
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Visual short-term memory storage is mediated by distinctive posterior brain mechanisms, such that capacity is determined both by a fixed number of objects and by object complexity.
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Benton Visual Retention Test is an assessment of visual perception, and visual memory abilities.
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Neuroimaging studies focus on the neural networks involved in visual memory using methods designed to activate brain areas involved in encoding, storage, and recall.
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Eidetic Visual memory is an ability to recall images, sounds, or objects in Visual memory with high precision for a few minutes without using mnemonics.
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Iconic memory is responsible for visual priming, because it works very quickly and unconsciously.
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Spatial Visual memory is a person's knowledge of the space around them, and their whereabouts in it.
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Spatial Visual memory is distinct from object Visual memory and involves different parts of the brain.
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Spatial Visual memory involves the dorsal parts of the brain and more specifically the hippocampus.
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However many times both types of Visual memory are used together, such as when trying to remember where you put a lost object.
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Spatial Visual memory is always being used whenever a person is moving any part of their body; therefore it is generally more vulnerable to decay than object Visual memory is.
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Object Visual memory involves processing features of an object or material such as texture, color, size, and orientation.
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Visual memory is not always accurate and can be misled by outside conditions.
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Furthermore, visual memory can be subjected to various memory errors which will affect accuracy.
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Students with good visual memory will recognize that same word later in their readers or other texts and will be able to recall the appearance of the word to spell it.
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In experiments testing rats' object recognition Visual memory it was found that Visual memory impairment can be the opposite, that there was a tendency to treat novel experiences as familiar.
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