Individual differences in mental rotation: what does gesture tell us?

被引:0
作者
Tilbe Göksun
Susan Goldin-Meadow
Nora Newcombe
Thomas Shipley
机构
[1] Temple University,Department of Neurology
[2] The University of Pennsylvania,undefined
[3] The University of Chicago,undefined
来源
Cognitive Processing | 2013年 / 14卷
关键词
Mental rotation; Individual differences; Gesture;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Gestures are common when people convey spatial information, for example, when they give directions or describe motion in space. Here, we examine the gestures speakers produce when they explain how they solved mental rotation problems (Shepard and Meltzer in Science 171:701–703, 1971). We asked whether speakers gesture differently while describing their problems as a function of their spatial abilities. We found that low-spatial individuals (as assessed by a standard paper-and-pencil measure) gestured more to explain their solutions than high-spatial individuals. While this finding may seem surprising, finer-grained analyses showed that low-spatial participants used gestures more often than high-spatial participants to convey “static only” information but less often than high-spatial participants to convey dynamic information. Furthermore, the groups differed in the types of gestures used to convey static information: high-spatial individuals were more likely than low-spatial individuals to use gestures that captured the internal structure of the block forms. Our gesture findings thus suggest that encoding block structure may be as important as rotating the blocks in mental spatial transformation.
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页码:153 / 162
页数:9
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