Authors
Alison F Eardley, Linda Pring
Publication date
2014/7
Journal
Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness
Volume
108
Issue
4
Pages
323-334
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
Introduction
Previous research has suggested that visual images are more easily generated, more vivid, and more memorable than other sensory modalities. This research examined whether or not imagery is experienced in similar ways by people with and without sight. Specifically, the imageability of visual, auditory, and tactile cue words was compared. The degree to which images were multimodal or unimodal was also examined.
Methods
Twelve participants who were totally blind from early infancy and 12 sighted participants generated images in response to 53 sensory and nonsensory words, rating imageability and the sensory modality, and describing images. From these 53 items, 4 subgroups of words that stimulated images that were predominantly visual, tactile, auditory, and low-imagery were created.
Results
T-tests comparing imageability ratings from blind and sighted participants found no differences for …
Total citations
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