0000000000796900

AUTHOR

Margaux Gelin

showing 8 related works from this author

Spotlight on the Survival Processing Advantage': An FNIRS Study on Adaptive Memory

2015

International audience; In the present study, participants had to rate words for their relevance in an ancestral survival scenario (e.g., is bottle relevant in the fictious scenario of being stranded in the grasslands of a foreign land without basic supplies) and for their pleasantness (e.g., is bottle a pleasant word?). A distractor task lasting a few minutes followed and the participants were then tested on their recall of the words. We used fNIRS to bilaterally monitor the dorsolateral-prefrontal cortex (DLPFC, known to be involved in strategic encoding) during the processing of verbal material in these two deep encoding situations. At the behavioral level, we replicated the survival pro…

[SCCO.PSYC] Cognitive science/Psychology[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychologybehavioral disciplines and activitiespsychological phenomena and processes
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Do animacy effects persist in memory for context?

2017

International audience; The adaptive view of human memory (Nairne, 2010) assumes that animates (e.g., rabbit) are remembered better than inanimates (e.g., glass) because animates are ultimately more important for fitness than inanimates. Previous studies provided evidence for this view by showing that animates were recalled or recognized better than inanimates (e.g., Nairne, VanArsdall, Pandeirada, Cogdill, & LeBreton, 2013), but they did not assess memory for contextual details (e.g., where animates vs. inanimates occurred). In this study, we tested recollection of spatial information (Study 1) and temporal information (Study 2) associated with animate versus inanimate words. The findings …

AdultMaleAdolescentPhysiologyMemory EpisodicHuman memory[ SCCO.PSYC ] Cognitive science/Psychology050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)Evolutionary psychologyVocabulary050105 experimental psychologyYoung AdultPhysiology (medical)HumansContextual information0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesTemporal informationEpisodic memoryGeneral PsychologyRecallEpisodic memory05 social sciencesAssociation LearningRecognition PsychologyGeneral MedicineAnimacyEvolutionary psychologyMemory for contextNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPattern Recognition VisualMental Recall[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyFemaleAnimacyPsychologyCognitive psychologyQuarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
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“It is alive!” Evidence for animacy effects in semantic categorization and lexical decision

2019

AbstractAnimacy is one of the basic semantic features of word meaning and influences perceptual and episodic memory processes. However, evidence that this variable also influences lexicosemantic processing is mixed. As animacy is a semantic variable thought to have evolutionary roots, we first examined its influence in a semantic categorization task that did not make the animacy dimension salient, namely, concrete-abstract categorization. Animates were categorized faster (and more accurately) than inanimates. We then assessed the influence of animacy in two lexical decision experiments. In Experiment 2, we mostly used legal nonwords, whereas in Experiment 3, we varied the context of the non…

Linguistics and Languagemedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)[SCCO.LING]Cognitive science/Linguistics050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and Linguistics03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCategorizationSalientPerception[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyLexical decision taskSemantic memory0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAnimacyPsychologyEpisodic memory030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGeneral PsychologyCognitive psychologymedia_common
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Animacy effects in episodic memory: do imagery processes really play a role?

2019

International audience; Animates are remembered better than inanimates because the former are ultimately more important for fitness than the latter. What, however, are the proximate mechanisms underpinning this effect? We focused on imagery processes as one proximate explanation. We tested whether animacy effects are related to the vividness of mental images (Study 1), or to the dynamic/motoric nature of mental images corresponding to animate words (Study 2). The findings showed that: (1) Animates are not estimated to be more vivid than inanimates; (2) The potentially more dynamic nature of the representations of animates does not seem to be a factor making animates more memorable than inan…

AdultMaleMemory EpisodicMovementMental imageryEvolutionary psychologyMemory load050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Humans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEpisodic memoryGeneral PsychologyRecallEpisodic memory[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/Neuroscience05 social sciencesAnimacyEvolutionary psychology[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyMental RecallImaginationFemalePsychologyAnimacy030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyMental imageMemory (Hove, England)
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Adaptative memory and animacy effect

2017

According to the adaptive memory view, human memory was shaped in the distant past to remember fitness relevant information (e.g., finding food, protecting ourselves from predators). An increasing number of studies favor this view, by showing that information related to to survival is memorized better than information not related to survival (Nairne, Thompson, & Pandeirada, 2007). Recently, a new type of findings further supports this functional approach of memory: animacy effects, that is to say the observation that animates (living things able of independent movements; e.g., baby, grasshopper) are remembered better than inanimates (non-living things e.g., teakettle, rope). One account of …

[SHS.PSY] Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyExplication ultime/proximaleMémoire adaptativeEffet animéAdaptative memoryEpisodic memoryUltimate/Proximate explanationMémoire épisodiqueAnimacy effectProximate mechanismsMécanismes proximaux
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Mental imagery as a proximate explanation of the better remembering of living things over nonliving things

2017

International audience

[SCCO]Cognitive scienceMental imagery[SCCO] Cognitive science[ SCCO ] Cognitive scienceComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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Animacy effects in episodic memory : evidence for a stone-age memory

2017

International audience

[SCCO]Cognitive science[ SCCO ] Cognitive science[SCCO] Cognitive scienceComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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QJE-STD_16-208.R2-Supplemental_Material – Supplemental material for Do animacy effects persist in memory for context?

2018

Supplemental material, QJE-STD_16-208.R2-Supplemental_Material for Do animacy effects persist in memory for context? by Margaux Gelin, Patrick Bonin, Alain Méot and Aurélia Bugaiska in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

FOS: Psychology170199 Psychology not elsewhere classified
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