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Dynamics of mental imagery.

Ishan Singhal, Nisheeth Srivastava

Consciousness and cognition May 1, 2025 DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2025.103865

Summary

Imagined experiences unfold with surprising stability, as demonstrated in a study involving 827 participants. Results revealed that mental imagery operates on distinct timescales, influenced by two main factors: temporal ability and stability. While imagined content is slower to manipulate compared to visual perception, it remains more stable. Both processes share a common constraint, maintaining similar temporal windows of conscious experience. This exploration highlights the nuanced phenomenology of mental imagery and its complex interplay with time-consciousness, offering deeper insights into our cognitive dynamics.

Abstract

Phenomenology of mental imagery can reveal the structure of underlying mental representations, yet progress has been limited because of its private nature. Through a phenomenology-recreation task we elucidate the dynamics of mental imagery. Specifically, the temporal grain, speed of object manipulation, smoothness of contents unfolding, and temporal extent of stability of imagined contents. To gauge these properties, we asked a large cohort of participants (N = 827) to recreate these aspects of their imagination in six tasks. Results showed that temporal features of imagination unfold at distinct timescales, though a factor analysis showed that variance in these tasks could be accounted for via two factors; temporal ability and stability of mental imagery. Additionally, we contrast these regularities with those documented for visual perception, showing that imagined contents are sluggish but more stable than perception. However, both imagination and perception share a common constraint; maintaining identically sized temporal windows of conscious experience.

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