We continually draw on, and link, conceptual knowledge with perception as we process and interact with our surroundings. This chapter highlights issues at the intersection of perceptual and conceptual processing in human memory. First, it discusses the role of the brain's perceptual systems and connected regions during conceptual processing.Next, a case study of real-world (or 'canonical') size is used to illustrate questions and issues that arise when seeking to understand phenomena that can require information from both perceptual input and semantic memory to be integrated. The influence of conceptual processing on perception is then described, before outlining some additional related factors: conceptual granularity, episodic memory, and individual differences. The chapter concludes by looking to the future of this research area -a field that requires a unique understanding of issues that lie at the heart of perception, memory, and more.2 Switching on a lamp, searching for our keys, and interpreting a street sign, all draw on incoming perceptual input and our semantic memory of concepts. In fact, we continually link our conceptual knowledge and perceptions. It is perhaps not a surprise, then, that the field of conceptual processing is broad, with questions that touch upon perception, semantic memory, learning, language, and categorization, among others. This chapter is not intended to be exhaustive, but highlights a set of issues that lie at the intersection of perceptual and conceptual processing in memory. These terms -'perceptual' and 'conceptual'-are easily defined at their extremes, but less so at their intersection. Coming back to a previous example, switching on a lamp requires the perceptual (i.e., sensory-grounded) process of detecting its shape -a basic function of the visual system. On the other hand, understanding a lamp's function, or features that are necessary (connected to outlet, working bulb) versus optional (outside markings), are conceptual processes that are based in semantic memory. This distinction is less clear-cut when input from semantic memory and perception interact. For instance, noticing that a lamp is unusually small or large requires knowing the typical size of lamps, and identifying this lamp's size from visual size cues (the domain of real-world size is discussed further below).The link between conceptual and perceptual information in memory is an important topic: the organization of perceptual and conceptual systems is central to understanding relevant neurological deterioration (Fujimori et al., 1997). Patients with semantic dementia frequently experience failures in object memory (Fuld et al., 1990) and associated knowledge (Hodges & Patterson, 2007). In fact, semantic dementia patients can be particularly vulnerable to memory failures for those concepts that rely on combinations of rich perceptual features (Hoffman et al., 2012), reflecting just how intertwined perception and concept knowledge are.
The role of perceptual systems during conceptual processingPerceptual system...