Does spatial cognitive style affect how navigational strategy is planned?

被引:0
|
作者
Alessia Bocchi
Massimiliano Palmiero
Raffaella Nori
Paola Verde
Laura Piccardi
机构
[1] IRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia,Cognitive and Motor Rehabilitation Unit
[2] University of L’Aquila,Department of Biotechnological and Applied Clinical Sciences
[3] University of Bologna,Department of Psychology
[4] Italian Air Force Experimental Flight Centre,Aerospace Medicine Department
[5] University of L’Aquila,Department of Life, Health and Environmental Sciences
来源
Experimental Brain Research | 2019年 / 237卷
关键词
Spatial navigation; Planning; Cognitive style; Individual factors; Strategy;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
People orient themselves in the environment using three different, hierarchically organized, spatial cognitive styles: landmark, route, and survey. Landmark style is based on a representation encompassing only visual information (terrain features); route style is based on a representation that connects landmarks and routes using an egocentric (body-centred) frame of reference; survey style is based on a global map-like representation that mainly involves an allocentric (world-centred) frame of reference. This study was aimed at investigating whether individual spatial cognitive style affected the way to plan a path when searching for a lost object. Participants with landmark, route, and survey style were assessed with an ecological navigational planning task (the Key Search Task), which required planning a strategy to search for the lost key in a hypothetical wide squared field. Results showed that spatial cognitive styles were associated to different navigational planning strategies, although the time to complete the Key Search Task was comparable across the styles. As revealed by the Key Search Task score, survey style individuals were the best navigational planners, route style individuals were less efficient and landmark style individuals were the least efficient. These results suggest that spatial cognitive style has effects on navigational planning. Implications for clinical settings, such as for developmental topographical disorientation, are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:2523 / 2533
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] How predictive are sex and empathizing–systemizing cognitive style for entry into the academic areas of social or physical sciences?
    Y. Groen
    A. B. M. Fuermaier
    L. I. Tucha
    J. Koerts
    O. Tucha
    Cognitive Processing, 2018, 19 : 95 - 106
  • [42] How can an understanding of cognitive style enable trainee teachers to have a better understanding of differentiation in the classroom?
    Evans, Carol
    Waring, Michael
    EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH FOR POLICY AND PRACTICE, 2011, 10 (03) : 149 - 169
  • [43] How does distance affect market entry mode choice? Evidence from French companies
    Moalla, Emna
    Mayrhofer, Ulrike
    EUROPEAN MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2020, 38 (01) : 135 - 145
  • [44] How Does Corporate Charitable Giving Affect Enterprise Innovation? A Literature Review and Research Directions
    Xu, Lei
    Guo, Xiaoning
    Liu, Yan
    Sun, Xiaochen
    Ji, Jie
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 14 (23)
  • [45] How Does Rural Resilience Affect Return Migration: Evidence from Frontier Regions in China
    Su, Yiqing
    Hu, Meiqi
    Zhang, Xiaoyin
    SYSTEMS, 2025, 13 (02):
  • [46] Leveraging the supply base for innovation: how does supply base management affect innovation performance?
    Li, Xiaoyun
    Li, Suicheng
    Qiao, Jianqi
    Wu, Mengchao
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INNOVATION MANAGEMENT, 2024, 27 (01) : 334 - 369
  • [47] How does a foreign subsidiary's differentiation strategy fit competitive dynamics and mandate?
    Pehrsson, Anders
    EUROPEAN BUSINESS REVIEW, 2016, 28 (06) : 690 - 708
  • [48] How predictive are sex and empathizing-systemizing cognitive style for entry into the academic areas of social or physical sciences?
    Groen, Y.
    Fuermaier, A. B. M.
    Tucha, L. I.
    Koerts, J.
    Tucha, O.
    COGNITIVE PROCESSING, 2018, 19 (01) : 95 - 106
  • [49] How does the nature of living and dead roots affect the residence time of carbon in the root litter continuum?
    Personeni, E
    Loiseau, P
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2004, 267 (1-2) : 129 - 141
  • [50] How does the nature of living and dead roots affect the residence time of carbon in the root litter continuum?
    E. Personeni
    P. Loiseau
    Plant and Soil, 2004, 267 : 129 - 141