» Articles » PMID: 37209446

Non-commitment in Mental Imagery

Overview
Journal Cognition
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Psychology
Date 2023 May 20
PMID 37209446
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

We examine non-commitment in the imagination. Across 5 studies (N > 1, 800), we find that most people are non-committal about basic aspects of their mental images, including features that would be readily apparent in real images. While previous work on the imagination has discussed the possibility of non-commitment, this paper is the first, to our knowledge, to examine this systematically and empirically. We find that people do not commit to basic properties of specified mental scenes (Studies 1 and 2), and that people report non-commitment rather than uncertainty or forgetfulness (Study 3). Such non-commitment is present even for people with generally vivid imaginations, and those who report imagining the specified scene very vividly (Studies 4a, 4b). People readily confabulate properties of their mental images when non-commitment is not offered as an explicit option (Study 5). Taken together, these results establish non-commitment as a pervasive component of mental imagery.

Citing Articles

Distinct distributed brain networks dissociate self-generated mental states.

Anderson N, Salvo J, Smallwood J, Braga R bioRxiv. 2025; .

PMID: 40060698 PMC: 11888405. DOI: 10.1101/2025.02.27.640604.


Uncovering the Role of the Early Visual Cortex in Visual Mental Imagery.

Dijkstra N Vision (Basel). 2024; 8(2.

PMID: 38804350 PMC: 11130976. DOI: 10.3390/vision8020029.