Barhorst-Cates Erica M, Rand Kristina M, Creem-Regehr Sarah H
Department of Psychology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Oct 19;11(10):e0163785. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0163785. eCollection 2016.
Recent work with simulated reductions in visual acuity and contrast sensitivity has found decrements in survey spatial learning as well as increased attentional demands when navigating, compared to performance with normal vision. Given these findings, and previous work showing that peripheral field loss has been associated with impaired mobility and spatial memory for room-sized spaces, we investigated the role of peripheral vision during navigation using a large-scale spatial learning paradigm. First, we aimed to establish the magnitude of spatial memory errors at different levels of field restriction. Second, we tested the hypothesis that navigation under these different levels of restriction would use additional attentional resources. Normally sighted participants walked on novel real-world paths wearing goggles that restricted the field-of-view (FOV) to severe (15°, 10°, 4°, or 0°) or mild angles (60°) and then pointed to remembered target locations using a verbal reporting measure. They completed a concurrent auditory reaction time task throughout each path to measure cognitive load. Only the most severe restrictions (4° and blindfolded) showed impairment in pointing error compared to the mild restriction (within-subjects). The 10° and 4° conditions also showed an increase in reaction time on the secondary attention task, suggesting that navigating with these extreme peripheral field restrictions demands the use of limited cognitive resources. This comparison of different levels of field restriction suggests that although peripheral field loss requires the actor to use more attentional resources while navigating starting at a less extreme level (10°), spatial memory is not negatively affected until the restriction is very severe (4°). These results have implications for understanding of the mechanisms underlying spatial learning during navigation and the approaches that may be taken to develop assistance for navigation with visual impairment.
最近关于模拟视力和对比敏感度降低的研究发现,与正常视力时的表现相比,在导航过程中,调查空间学习能力下降,注意力需求增加。鉴于这些发现,以及之前的研究表明周边视野丧失与行动能力受损和对房间大小空间的空间记忆受损有关,我们使用大规模空间学习范式研究了周边视觉在导航过程中的作用。首先,我们旨在确定在不同程度的视野限制下空间记忆错误的程度。其次,我们测试了这样一个假设,即在这些不同程度的限制下导航会使用额外的注意力资源。视力正常的参与者戴着护目镜在新的现实世界路径上行走,护目镜将视野(FOV)限制在严重程度(15°、10°、4°或0°)或轻度角度(60°),然后使用言语报告测量法指出记住的目标位置。他们在每条路径上都完成了一项并发听觉反应时间任务,以测量认知负荷。与轻度限制(受试者内)相比,只有最严重的限制(4°和蒙眼)在指向错误方面表现出受损。10°和4°条件下在次要注意力任务上的反应时间也有所增加,这表明在这些极端周边视野限制下导航需要使用有限的认知资源。对不同程度视野限制的这种比较表明,尽管周边视野丧失要求行动者在从较低极端水平(10°)开始导航时使用更多的注意力资源,但在限制非常严重(4°)之前,空间记忆不会受到负面影响。这些结果对于理解导航过程中空间学习的潜在机制以及为视力障碍者开发导航辅助方法具有启示意义。