The stability of visual perspective and vividness during mental time travel

  • Jeffrey J. Berg
  • , Adrian W. Gilmore
  • , Ruth A. Shaffer
  • , Kathleen B. McDermott

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

When remembering or imagining, people can experience an event from their own eyes, or as an outside observer, with differing levels of vividness. The perspective from, and vividness with, which a person remembers or imagines has been related to numerous individual difference characteristics. These findings require that phenomenology during mental time travel be trait-like—that people consistently experience similar perspectives and levels of vividness. This assumption remains untested. Across two studies (combined N = 295), we examined the stability of visual perspective and vividness across multiple trials and timepoints. Perspective and vividness showed weak within-session stability when reported across just a few trials but showed strong within-session stability when sufficient trials were collected. Importantly, both visual perspective and vividness demonstrated good-to-excellent across-session stability across different delay intervals (two days to six weeks). Overall, our results suggest that people dependably experience similar visual phenomenology across occurrences of mental time travel.

Original languageEnglish
Article number103116
JournalConsciousness and Cognition
Volume92
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2021

Keywords

  • Autobiographical memory
  • Episodic future thought
  • Field perspective
  • Individual differences
  • Mental time travel
  • Observer perspective
  • Phenomenology
  • Visual perspective
  • Vividness

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