Humans and animals recover their sense of position and orientation using properties of the surface layout, but the processes underlying this ability are disputed. Although behavioral and neurophysiological experiments on animals long have suggested that reorientation depends on representations of surface distance, recent experiments on young children join experimental studies and computational models of animal navigation to suggest that reorientation depends either on processing of any continuous perceptual variables or on matching of 2D, depthless images of the landscape. We tested the surface distance hypothesis against these alternatives through studies of children, using environments whose 3D shape and 2D image properties were arranged ...
Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulata) were subjected to a place finding task in a rectangular room perfectl...
Using vision for navigation is important for many animals and a common debate is the extent to which...
7th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive-Neuroscience-Society, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, APR, 2000Intern...
Finding the way home, orienting into familiar and unfamiliar environments, computing our place and p...
A fundamental process underlying navigation behaviour, shown to occur in every species tested, uses ...
The way in which organisms represent the shape of their environments during navigation has been deba...
The way in which organisms represent the shape of their environments during navigation has been deba...
The way in which organisms represent the shape of their environments during navigation has been deba...
Geometry is one of the highest achievements of our species, but its foundations are obscure. Consis...
No embargo requiredIn two spatial navigation experiments, human participants were asked to find a hi...
There is ongoing debate in spatial cognition about the mechanisms by which organisms are able to reo...
Geometric features of surfaces and local information are constitutive elements of spatial representa...
The way in which human and non-human animals represent the shape of their environments remains a con...
Adults searched for a goal in images of a rectangular environment. The goal’s position was constant ...
In two spatial navigation experiments, human participants were asked to find a hidden goal (a Wi-Fi ...
Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulata) were subjected to a place finding task in a rectangular room perfectl...
Using vision for navigation is important for many animals and a common debate is the extent to which...
7th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive-Neuroscience-Society, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, APR, 2000Intern...
Finding the way home, orienting into familiar and unfamiliar environments, computing our place and p...
A fundamental process underlying navigation behaviour, shown to occur in every species tested, uses ...
The way in which organisms represent the shape of their environments during navigation has been deba...
The way in which organisms represent the shape of their environments during navigation has been deba...
The way in which organisms represent the shape of their environments during navigation has been deba...
Geometry is one of the highest achievements of our species, but its foundations are obscure. Consis...
No embargo requiredIn two spatial navigation experiments, human participants were asked to find a hi...
There is ongoing debate in spatial cognition about the mechanisms by which organisms are able to reo...
Geometric features of surfaces and local information are constitutive elements of spatial representa...
The way in which human and non-human animals represent the shape of their environments remains a con...
Adults searched for a goal in images of a rectangular environment. The goal’s position was constant ...
In two spatial navigation experiments, human participants were asked to find a hidden goal (a Wi-Fi ...
Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulata) were subjected to a place finding task in a rectangular room perfectl...
Using vision for navigation is important for many animals and a common debate is the extent to which...
7th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive-Neuroscience-Society, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, APR, 2000Intern...