The Resiliency of Memorability: A Predictor of Memory Separate from Attention and Priming
Wilma A. Bainbridge

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that image memorability is an intrinsic and resilient property that independently influences memory, unaffected by attention or priming effects, as shown through five psychophysical experiments.
Contribution
It provides evidence that memorability is a stable, intrinsic attribute of images, distinct from attention and priming influences, supported by experimental validation.
Findings
Memorability remains consistent regardless of attention or priming.
Attention and priming do not significantly alter memorability effects.
Memorability independently predicts memory performance.
Abstract
When we encounter a new person or place, we may easily encode it into our memories, or we may quickly forget it. Recent work finds that this likelihood of encoding a given entity - memorability - is highly consistent across viewers and intrinsic to an image; people tend to remember and forget the same images. However, several forces influence our memories beyond the memorability of the stimulus itself - for example, how attention-grabbing the stimulus is, how much attentional resources we dedicate to the task, or how primed we are for that stimulus. How does memorability interact with these various phenomena, and could any of them explain the effects of memorability found in prior work? This study uses five psychophysical experiments to explore the link between memorability and three attention-related phenomena: 1) bottom-up attention (through testing spatial cueing and visual search),…
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