Central and East European
Society for Phenomenology

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190214

Ambiguity in acquiring spatial representation from descriptions compared to depictions

the role of spatial orientation

Holly A. Taylor David H. Uttal Joan Fisher Marshall Mazepa

pp. 278-291

Abstract

Adults can make judgments about multiple spatial relations based on information gained from different kinds of input, including maps, descriptions, and through navigation [1]. However, factors such as spatial orientation influence performance. We investigated spatial orientation effects on learning from different media. In Experiment 1, participants learned a house from a map or a description. They then judged surrounding locations while imagining being in each room and they reconstructed the house. Participants who learned from a description performed worse on both tasks. Errors suggested they interpreted the term "in front" differently than intended [2]. Experiment 2 tested this hypothesis by examining two factors influencing interpretation of "in front", specific interpretation instructions and orientation information. The orientation information influenced performance more than the explicit interpretation of "in front." Taken together, the results indicate multiple influences on the spatial reference frame participants use to interpret spatial terms.

Publication details

Published in:

Montello Daniel D (2001) Spatial information theory: foundations of geographic information science international conference, cosit 2001 morro bay, ca, usa, september 19–23, 2001 proceedings. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 278-291

DOI: 10.1007/3-540-45424-1_19

Full citation:

Taylor Holly A., Uttal David H., Fisher Joan, Mazepa Marshall (2001) „Ambiguity in acquiring spatial representation from descriptions compared to depictions: the role of spatial orientation“, In: D.D. Montello (ed.), Spatial information theory, Dordrecht, Springer, 278–291.