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Mental imagery: functional mechanisms and clinical applications

Mental imagery: functional mechanisms and clinical applications
Mental imagery: functional mechanisms and clinical applications
Mental imagery research has weathered both disbelief of the phenomenon and inherent methodological limitations. Here we review recent behavioral, brain imaging, and clinical research that has reshaped our understanding of mental imagery. Research supports the claim that visual mental imagery is a depictive internal representation that functions like a weak form of perception. Brain imaging work has demonstrated that neural representations of mental and perceptual images resemble one another as early as the primary visual cortex (V1). Activity patterns in V1 encode mental images and perceptual images via a common set of low-level depictive visual features. Recent translational and clinical research reveals the pivotal role that imagery plays in many mental disorders and suggests how clinicians can utilize imagery in treatment.
1364-6613
590-602
Pearson, J
fdc3382f-fab8-4adc-b027-ddb22ae42291
Naselaris, T
4a8aad3e-c6e4-4051-b0b5-8635a082c7da
EA, Holmes
0dff2744-631a-47ca-b17a-4221d4d9b6e7
SM, Kosslyn
5041c295-df65-46a1-b8d3-b73e3ec81cb2
Pearson, J
fdc3382f-fab8-4adc-b027-ddb22ae42291
Naselaris, T
4a8aad3e-c6e4-4051-b0b5-8635a082c7da
EA, Holmes
0dff2744-631a-47ca-b17a-4221d4d9b6e7
SM, Kosslyn
5041c295-df65-46a1-b8d3-b73e3ec81cb2

Pearson, J, Naselaris, T, EA, Holmes and SM, Kosslyn (2015) Mental imagery: functional mechanisms and clinical applications. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 19 (10), 590-602. (doi:10.1016/j.tics.2015.08.003).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Mental imagery research has weathered both disbelief of the phenomenon and inherent methodological limitations. Here we review recent behavioral, brain imaging, and clinical research that has reshaped our understanding of mental imagery. Research supports the claim that visual mental imagery is a depictive internal representation that functions like a weak form of perception. Brain imaging work has demonstrated that neural representations of mental and perceptual images resemble one another as early as the primary visual cortex (V1). Activity patterns in V1 encode mental images and perceptual images via a common set of low-level depictive visual features. Recent translational and clinical research reveals the pivotal role that imagery plays in many mental disorders and suggests how clinicians can utilize imagery in treatment.

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Published date: 3 October 2015

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Local EPrints ID: 507952
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507952
ISSN: 1364-6613
PURE UUID: dd5d98c2-6694-494a-ac70-d4a188f17569

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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2026 17:37
Last modified: 08 Jan 2026 17:38

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Contributors

Author: J Pearson
Author: T Naselaris
Author: Holmes EA
Author: Kosslyn SM

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