Meijer Frank, van den Broek Egon L
Dept. of Cognitive Psychology and Ergonomics, Faculty of Behavioral Sciences, University of Twente, P.O. Box 217, 7500 AE Enschede, The Netherlands.
Vision Res. 2010 Mar 17;50(6):630-5. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2010.01.016. Epub 2010 Jan 29.
We investigated individual differences in interactively exploring 3D virtual objects. 36 participants explored 24 simple and 24 difficult objects (composed of respectively three and five Biederman geons) actively, passively, or not at all. Both their 3D mental representation of the objects and visuo-spatial ability was assessed. Results show that, regardless of the object's complexity, people with a low VSA benefit from active exploration of objects, where people with a middle or high VSA do not. These findings extend and refine earlier research on interactively learning visuo-spatial information and underline the importance to take individual differences into account.
我们研究了在交互式探索三维虚拟物体过程中的个体差异。36名参与者分别以主动、被动或完全不探索的方式探索了24个简单物体(由三个比德曼几何子组成)和24个复杂物体(由五个比德曼几何子组成)。我们评估了他们对物体的三维心理表征以及视觉空间能力。结果表明,无论物体的复杂性如何,视觉空间能力较低的人能从对物体的主动探索中受益,而视觉空间能力中等或较高的人则不然。这些发现扩展并完善了早期关于交互式学习视觉空间信息的研究,并强调了考虑个体差异的重要性。