Sensing the Slopes: Sensory Modality Effects on a Goal Location Task

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The Spatial Intelligence & Learning Center is composed of the following universities and is funded by an NSF Science of Learning Centers grant. Sensing the Slopes: Sensory Modality Effects on a Goal Location Task Steven Weisberg 1 , Daniele Nardi 2 , Nora Newcombe 1 , & Thomas Shipley 1 1 Temple University, 2 Sapienza University of Rome Sex Differences Egocentric/Allocentric? Introduction Apparatus and Procedure Terrain slope is a salient spatial cue, useful in spatial orientation for humans. However, males use slope cues more reliably than females (e.g., Nardi, Newcombe, & Shipley, 2011; 2012). We designed a goal location study to investigate 3 questions. 1.Can slope be represented only visually or only kinesthetically? 2.Are gender differences in using slope modulated by sensory modality? 3.Is there a preference for egocentric or allocentric representation of slope (e.g., Shelton & McNamara, 2001)? And, does this vary by sensory modality? Participants learned the location of the goal either while seated in the chair (visual-only), while standing up but blindfolded (kinesthetic-only condition), or while standing up and could see (combined). They were then disoriented, and asked to point to the goal after being told they were facing either uphill or downhill. 1.Slope can be accurately coded visually OR kinesthetically. 2.Sex differences: Males performed more accurately in the kinesthetic condition, but females were more accurate in the visual condition. Performance correlated with MRT for males, but WLT for women. 3.Error patterns and reaction time provided evidence for an egocentric encoding of slope. Slope is specified in the environment by visual and kinesthetic information. In the real world, these senses normally reinforce each other. Visual Kinesthetic Combined 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 Encoding time by condition Condition Encoding Time (s) * Visual Kinesthetic Combined 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 Sensory Modality By Sex Interaction Female Male Condition Percent Correct * Chance = 25% Effect of Sensory Modality Participants were faster only for concordant compared to discordant trials (discarding 2 participants who were wrong on all trials), not for facing direction or goal location. This is strong evidence for an egocentric reference frame. Variable MRT WLT SOT SBSOD Correc t Trials MRT .36 -.40 .08 .67** WLT -0.02 -.60** .06 .18 SOT -0.50* -0.35 -.24 -.38 SBSOD 0.06 0.16 0.04 -.04 Correct Trials 0.13 0.47* -0.42* -0.37 Male (above the diagonal) performance on the goal location task was significantly correlated with the Mental Rotation Test (MRT). Female performance (below the diagonal) was significantly correlated with the Water Level Test (WLT). SOT = Spatial Orientation Test, SBSOD = Santa Barbara Sense of Direction. Correlations Varied by Sex Orthogonal Vertical Diagonal 0 10 20 30 Error Type by Alignment Effect Discordant Concordant Error Type Total # Errors Trials were either concordant (facing direction = goal) or discordant (facing direction ≠ goal) during retrieval. Participants committed orthogonal errors more on discordant trials, suggesting that slope was a highly salient axis , and that participants used an egocentric reference frame. Conclusions Co ncordant Discordant Fa cing Up Fa cing Down Goal Up Goal Down 0 4 8 12 Difference in RT by Trial Type Trial Type ReactionTime *

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Sensing the Slopes: Sensory Modality Effects on a Goal Location Task Steven Weisberg 1 , Daniele Nardi 2 , Nora Newcombe 1 , & Thomas Shipley 1 1 Temple University, 2 Sapienza University of Rome. Effect of Sensory Modality. Introduction. Egocentric/ Allocentric ?. *. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Sensing the Slopes: Sensory Modality Effects on a Goal Location Task

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The Spatial Intelligence & Learning Center is composed of the following universities and is funded by an NSF

Science of Learning Centers grant.

Sensing the Slopes: Sensory Modality Effects on a Goal Location TaskSteven Weisberg1, Daniele Nardi2, Nora Newcombe1, & Thomas Shipley1

1Temple University, 2Sapienza University of Rome

Sex Differences

Egocentric/Allocentric?Introduction

Apparatus and Procedure

Terrain slope is a salient spatial cue, useful in spatial orientation for humans. However, males use slope cues more reliably than females (e.g., Nardi, Newcombe, & Shipley, 2011; 2012). We designed a goal location study to investigate 3 questions.

1. Can slope be represented only visually or only kinesthetically?

2. Are gender differences in using slope modulated by sensory modality?

3. Is there a preference for egocentric or allocentric representation of slope (e.g., Shelton & McNamara, 2001)? And, does this vary by sensory modality?

Participants learned the location of the goal either while seated in the chair (visual-only), while standing up but blindfolded (kinesthetic-only condition), or while standing up and could see (combined). They were then disoriented, and asked to point to the goal after being told they were facing either uphill or downhill.

1. Slope can be accurately coded visually OR kinesthetically.2. Sex differences:

• Males performed more accurately in the kinesthetic condition, but females were more accurate in the visual condition.

• Performance correlated with MRT for males, but WLT for women.

3. Error patterns and reaction time provided evidence for an egocentric encoding of slope.

Slope is specified in the environment by visual and kinesthetic information. In the real world, these senses normally reinforce each other.

Visual Kinesthetic Combined0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35Encoding time by condition

Condition

Enco

ding

Tim

e (s

)

*

Visual Kinesthetic Combined0

20

40

60

80

100

120

Sensory Modality By Sex Interaction

Female

Male

Condition

Perc

ent C

orre

ct*

Chance = 25%

Effect of Sensory Modality

Participants were faster only for concordant compared to discordant trials (discarding 2 participants who were wrong on all trials), not for facing direction or goal location. This is strong evidence for an egocentric reference frame.

Variable MRT WLT SOT SBSOD Correct Trials

MRT – .36 -.40 .08 .67**WLT -0.02 – -.60** .06 .18SOT -0.50* -0.35 – -.24 -.38

SBSOD 0.06 0.16 0.04 – -.04Correct Trials 0.13 0.47* -0.42* -0.37 –

Male (above the diagonal) performance on the goal location task was significantly correlated with the Mental Rotation Test (MRT). Female performance (below the diagonal) was significantly correlated with the Water Level Test (WLT). SOT = Spatial Orientation Test, SBSOD = Santa Barbara Sense of Direction.

Correlations Varied by Sex

Orthogonal Vertical Diagonal0

10

20

30

Error Type by Alignment Ef-fect

DiscordantConcordant

Error Type

Tota

l # E

rror

s

Trials were either concordant (facing direction = goal) or discordant (facing direction ≠ goal) during retrieval. Participants committed orthogonal errors more on discordant trials, suggesting that slope was a highly salient axis , and that participants used an egocentric reference frame.

Conclusions

Con-cordant

Discordant Facing Up Facing Down

Goal Up Goal Down

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

Difference in RT by Trial Type

Trial Type

Rea

ctio

nTim

e

*