We present two experiments investigating how navigators deal with ambiguous landmark information when learning unfamiliar routes. In the experiments we presented landmark objects repeatedly along a route, which allowed us to manipulate how informative single landmarks were (1) about the navigators' location along the route and (2) about the action navigators had to take at that location. Experiment 1 demonstrated that reducing location informativeness alone did not affect route learning performance. While reducing both location and action informativeness led to decreased route learning performance, participants still performed well above chance level. This demonstrates that they used other information than just the identity of landmark obje...
Route selection is governed by various strategies which often allow minimizing the required memory c...
In the development of navigation behavior, one important step is the transition from routes to maps....
Are some landmark positions at intersections better for finding a return path than others? This stud...
We present two experiments investigating how navigators deal with ambiguous landmark information whe...
Humans use visual features of the environment (landmarks) to allow them to navigate: finding new rou...
Establishing verbal memory traces for non-verbal stimuli was reported to facilitate or inhibit memor...
Establishing verbal memory traces for non-verbal stimuli was reported to facilitate or inhibit memor...
Two experiments investigated how people develop different landmark knowledge at decision points. Par...
Two experiments investigated how people develop different landmark knowledge at decision points. Par...
The use of landmark information in a route-navigation task has been investigated in a virtual enviro...
The use of landmark information in a route-navigation task has been investigated in a virtual enviro...
By having subjects drive a virtual taxicab through a computer-rendered town, we examined how landmar...
Today's navigation assistance systems provide turn-by-turn instructions, which only focus on the nex...
Today's navigation assistance systems provide turn-by-turn instructions, which only focus on the nex...
Route selection is governed by various strategies which often allow minimizing the required memory c...
Route selection is governed by various strategies which often allow minimizing the required memory c...
In the development of navigation behavior, one important step is the transition from routes to maps....
Are some landmark positions at intersections better for finding a return path than others? This stud...
We present two experiments investigating how navigators deal with ambiguous landmark information whe...
Humans use visual features of the environment (landmarks) to allow them to navigate: finding new rou...
Establishing verbal memory traces for non-verbal stimuli was reported to facilitate or inhibit memor...
Establishing verbal memory traces for non-verbal stimuli was reported to facilitate or inhibit memor...
Two experiments investigated how people develop different landmark knowledge at decision points. Par...
Two experiments investigated how people develop different landmark knowledge at decision points. Par...
The use of landmark information in a route-navigation task has been investigated in a virtual enviro...
The use of landmark information in a route-navigation task has been investigated in a virtual enviro...
By having subjects drive a virtual taxicab through a computer-rendered town, we examined how landmar...
Today's navigation assistance systems provide turn-by-turn instructions, which only focus on the nex...
Today's navigation assistance systems provide turn-by-turn instructions, which only focus on the nex...
Route selection is governed by various strategies which often allow minimizing the required memory c...
Route selection is governed by various strategies which often allow minimizing the required memory c...
In the development of navigation behavior, one important step is the transition from routes to maps....
Are some landmark positions at intersections better for finding a return path than others? This stud...