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George Sperling (born 1934) [1] is an American cognitive psychologist, researcher, and educator. Sperling documented the existence of iconic memory (one of the sensory memory subtypes). Through several experiments, he showed support for his hypothesis that human beings store a perfect image of the visual world for a brief moment, before it is ...
In 1960, George Sperling became the first to use a partial report paradigm to investigate the bipartite model of VSTM. [2] In Sperling's initial experiments in 1960, observers were presented with a tachistoscopic visual stimulus for a brief period of time (50 ms) consisting of either a 3x3 or 3x4 array of alphanumeric characters such as: P Y F G
In 1960, George Sperling conducted a study where participants were shown a set of letters for a brief amount of time and were asked to recall the letters they were shown afterwards. Participants were less likely to recall more letters when asked about the whole group of letters, but recalled more when asked about specific subgroups of the whole.
Following Sperling's (1960) procedures on iconic memory tasks, future researchers were interested in testing the same phenomenon for the auditory sensory store. Echoic memory is measured by behavioural tasks where participants are asked to repeat a sequence of tones, words, or syllables that were presented to them, usually requiring attention ...
Selective attention of vision was studied in the 1960s by George Sperling's partial report paradigm. It was also noticed that saccade control is modulated by cognitive processes, in that the eye moves preferentially towards areas of high salience. As the fovea of the eye is small, the eye cannot sharply resolve all of the visual field at once.
The Queen's Birthday Honours 1960 were appointments in many of the Commonwealth realms ... George William Alfred Birkett ... Rosalie Sperling Richardson, County ...
Elliot Sperling (1951–2017), American associate professor; Fritz Sperling (born 1945), Austrian bobsledder; Gene Sperling (born 1958), American economist and attorney; George Sperling (born 1934), American cognitive psychologist; Gerhard Sperling (born 1937), East German race walker; Hilde Krahwinkel Sperling (1908–1981), German tennis player
Selective attention of vision was studied in the 1960s by George Sperling's partial report paradigm. It was also noticed that saccade control is modulated by cognitive processes, insofar as the eye moves preferentially towards areas of high salience. As the fovea of the eye is small, the eye cannot sharply resolve the entire visual field at once.