Avraamides Marios N, Ioannidou Louiza M, Kyranidou Melina N
Department of Psychology, University of Cyprus, P.O. Box 20537, Nicosia 1678, Cyprus.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2007 Dec;60(12):1660-79. doi: 10.1080/17470210601121833.
Participants in two experiments adopted imagined perspectives in a perceptually available spatial scene and located targets by using either verbal terms (labelling) or arrows (pointing). Results revealed that performance was faster and more accurate for labelling than for pointing and more so when the adopted perspectives were misaligned with the physical orientation of the participant. This finding was obtained even when an orientation cue allowed participants to adopt the imagined perspective in advance of target presentation. A third experiment replicated these findings using traditional pointing and verbal responding. We argue that performance from misaligned perspectives in perspective-taking tasks suffers due to reference frame conflicts and that these conflicts are more pronounced with pointing and other manual responses that rely more on the reference frame of the physical body.
在两项实验中,参与者在一个可感知的空间场景中采用想象的视角,并通过使用语言术语(标记)或箭头(指示)来定位目标。结果显示,与指示相比,标记的表现更快且更准确,当采用的视角与参与者的身体方向不一致时更是如此。即使有一个方向提示让参与者在目标呈现之前就采用想象的视角,也能得到这一结果。第三个实验使用传统的指示和语言反应重复了这些发现。我们认为,在视角采择任务中,来自不一致视角的表现会因参照系冲突而受到影响,并且这些冲突在指示和其他更多依赖身体参照系的手动反应中更为明显。