Successful wayfinding requires accurate encoding of two types of information: landmarks and the spatial relations between them (e.g. landmark X is left/north of Y). Although both types of information are crucial to wayfinding, behavioral and neurological evidence suggest that they have different substrates. In this paper, we consider the nature of the difference by examining comprehension times of spatial information (i.e. route and survey descriptions) and landmark descriptions. In two studies, participants learned simple environments by reading descriptions from route or survey perspectives, half with a single perspective switch. On half of the switch trials, a landmark description was introduced just prior to the perspective switch. In t...
Previous findings in wayfinding research revealed effects of a landmark’s position at an intersectio...
神奈川県茅ヶ崎市 Perrig and Kintsch (1985) suggested that a spatial mental model constructed from the route ...
Our daily navigation and wayfinding activities are cognitively challenging processes, especially in ...
A number of studies showed that individual differences in way\ufb01nding ability and spatial represe...
Navigation is a process that humans use to get from A to B. Landmarks used during navigation and way...
Environmental navigation entails the constant integration of information across space and time; howe...
The cognitive representation of a return path is a rather unexplored topic including different issue...
People experience environments in many different ways: by moving through it, by inspecting it from a...
Despite much recent interest, it is unclear which types of landmarks are best suited for survey know...
This study investigated whether spatial learning is constrained by stage-based processes or by goal-...
Are some landmark positions at intersections better for finding a return path than others? This stud...
Landmarks serve to structure the environment we experience, and therefore they are also critically i...
International audienceMental images constructed after visual examination of a spatial configuration ...
This study examined the working memory systems relevant for wayfinding. 24 participants learned two ...
We present two experiments investigating how navigators deal with ambiguous landmark information whe...
Previous findings in wayfinding research revealed effects of a landmark’s position at an intersectio...
神奈川県茅ヶ崎市 Perrig and Kintsch (1985) suggested that a spatial mental model constructed from the route ...
Our daily navigation and wayfinding activities are cognitively challenging processes, especially in ...
A number of studies showed that individual differences in way\ufb01nding ability and spatial represe...
Navigation is a process that humans use to get from A to B. Landmarks used during navigation and way...
Environmental navigation entails the constant integration of information across space and time; howe...
The cognitive representation of a return path is a rather unexplored topic including different issue...
People experience environments in many different ways: by moving through it, by inspecting it from a...
Despite much recent interest, it is unclear which types of landmarks are best suited for survey know...
This study investigated whether spatial learning is constrained by stage-based processes or by goal-...
Are some landmark positions at intersections better for finding a return path than others? This stud...
Landmarks serve to structure the environment we experience, and therefore they are also critically i...
International audienceMental images constructed after visual examination of a spatial configuration ...
This study examined the working memory systems relevant for wayfinding. 24 participants learned two ...
We present two experiments investigating how navigators deal with ambiguous landmark information whe...
Previous findings in wayfinding research revealed effects of a landmark’s position at an intersectio...
神奈川県茅ヶ崎市 Perrig and Kintsch (1985) suggested that a spatial mental model constructed from the route ...
Our daily navigation and wayfinding activities are cognitively challenging processes, especially in ...