Are images an important means of recalling information from
memory and solving problems? Or are images just display lights on
the mind's computer? In "Image and Mind," Stephen Kosslyn makes an
impressive case for the view that images are critically involved in
the life of the mind. In a series of ingenious experiments, he
provides hard evidence that people can construct elaborate mental
images, search them for specific information, and perform such
other internal operations as mental rotation. Kosslyn demonstrates
that these results are best explained by a two-tiered model in
which images are stored in abstract form in long-term memory and
then assembled for internal display in much the way that images on
a TV screen can be created from files in a computer memory.
Kosslyn shows how this model can be used to solve many of the
persistent questions which have traditionally plagued theories of
imagery that attempted to install imagery as the exclusive medium
of mental representation.
Unlike any other work on imagery, Image and Mind provides an
integrated account of most of the modern empirical results from
imagery research within the framework of a coherent theory. The
book also introduces a host of new experimental techniques and
major hypotheses to guide future research. The result is a landmark
book and a major event in the study of the mind.
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