Abstract

The pictorial theory of mental imagery was a central concern of cognitive science during the latter years of the last century. Proponents of the theory argued that images are reinterpreted by the same processes that act upon perceptual inputs. This idea has recently re-emerged within the context of visual perspective-taking. The perceptual simulation theory argues that an observer not only generates an image of what another individual sees but the image is used by the perceptual system in a bottom-up manner. Based on the assumption of Kosslyn and colleagues, we argue that a minimum requirement of a pictorial theory of visual perspective taking is that observers must faithfully represent relative distance between different points of a scene as would be viewed from an alternative position. The available evidence does not however support this. We conclude that the latest attempt to give mental imagery causal status in a cognitive process is unwarranted.

DOI

10.1016/j.concog.2022.103352

Publication Date

2022-07-01

Publication Title

Consciousness and Cognition

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

1053-8100

Embargo Period

2024-11-22

Keywords

Kosslyn, Mental Imagery, Perceptual Simulation, Perspective Taking, Pylyshyn

Share

COinS