When you look at your past: Eye movement during autobiographical retrieval

Conscious Cogn. 2024 Feb;118:103652. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2024.103652. Epub 2024 Feb 1.ABSTRACTUntil recently, little was known about whether or how autobiographical memory (i.e., memory of personal information) activates eye movement. This issue is now being addressed by several studies demonstrating not only how autobiographical memory activates eye movement, but also how eye movement influences the characteristics of autobiographical retrieval. This paper summarizes this research and presents a hypothesis according to which fixations and saccades during autobiographical retrieval mirror the construction of the visual image of the retrieved event. This hypothesis suggests that eye movements during autobiographical retrieval mirror the attempts of the visual system to generate and manipulate mental representations of autobiographical retrieval. It offers a theoretical framework for a burgeoning area of research that provides a rigorous behavioral evaluation of the phenomenological experience of memory.PMID:38301389 | DOI:10.1016/j.concog.2024.103652
Source: Consciousness and Cognition - Category: Neurology Authors: Source Type: research
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