Gregory Emma, Landau Barbara, McCloskey Michael
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.
Vis cogn. 2011 Sep 1;19(8):1035-1062. doi: 10.1080/13506285.2011.610764.
Although many cognitive functions require information about the orientations of objects, little is known about representation or processing of object orientation. Mirror-image confusion provides a potential clue. This phenomenon is typically characterized as a tendency to confuse images related by left-right reflection (reflection across an extrinsic vertical axis). However, in most previous studies the stimuli were inadequate for identifying a specific mirror-image (or other) relationship as the cause of the observed confusions. Using stimuli constructed to resolve this problem, Gregory and McCloskey (2010) found that adults' errors were primarily reflections across an object axis, and not left-right reflections. The present study demonstrates that young children's orientation errors include both object-axis reflections and left-right reflections. We argue that children and adults represent object orientation in the same coordinate-system format (McCloskey, 2009), with orientation errors resulting from difficulty encoding or retaining one (adults) or two (children) specific components of the posited representations.
尽管许多认知功能都需要有关物体方向的信息,但对于物体方向的表征或处理却知之甚少。镜像混淆提供了一个潜在线索。这种现象通常表现为倾向于混淆通过左右反射(绕外在垂直轴反射)相关的图像。然而,在大多数先前的研究中,刺激不足以确定特定的镜像(或其他)关系是观察到的混淆的原因。使用为解决此问题而构建的刺激,格雷戈里和麦克洛斯基(2010年)发现成年人的错误主要是绕物体轴的反射,而不是左右反射。本研究表明幼儿的方向错误包括物体轴反射和左右反射。我们认为儿童和成年人以相同的坐标系格式表征物体方向(麦克洛斯基,2009年),方向错误是由于对假定表征的一个(成年人)或两个(儿童)特定成分进行编码或保留困难所致。