Faculty of Social Sciences, Institute of Psychology, The John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Poland.
Independent Researcher, Poland.
PLoS One. 2024 May 30;19(5):e0304008. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0304008. eCollection 2024.
The current study investigated spatial scaling of tactile maps among blind adults and blindfolded sighted controls. We were specifically interested in identifying spatial scaling strategies as well as effects of different scaling directions (up versus down) on participants' performance. To this aim, we asked late blind participants (with visual memory, Experiment 1) and early blind participants (without visual memory, Experiment 2) as well as sighted blindfolded controls to encode a map including a target and to place a response disc at the same spot on an empty, constant-sized referent space. Maps had five different sizes resulting in five scaling factors (1:3, 1:2, 1:1, 2:1, 3:1), allowing to investigate different scaling directions (up and down) in a single, comprehensive design. Accuracy and speed of learning about the target location as well as responding served as dependent variables. We hypothesized that participants who can use visual mental representations (i.e., late blind and blindfolded sighted participants) may adopt mental transformation scaling strategies. However, our results did not support this hypothesis. At the same time, we predicted the usage of relative distance scaling strategies in early blind participants, which was supported by our findings. Moreover, our results suggested that tactile maps can be scaled as accurately and even faster by blind participants than by sighted participants. Furthermore, irrespective of the visual status, participants of each visual status group gravitated their responses towards the center of the space. Overall, it seems that a lack of visual imagery does not impair early blind adults' spatial scaling ability but causes them to use a different strategy than sighted and late blind individuals.
本研究调查了成年盲人以及蒙眼视力正常者的触觉地图的空间缩放。我们特别感兴趣的是识别空间缩放策略,以及不同缩放方向(向上和向下)对参与者表现的影响。为此,我们要求晚期盲人参与者(具有视觉记忆,实验 1)和早期盲人参与者(没有视觉记忆,实验 2)以及蒙眼视力正常的对照组参与者编码一张包含目标的地图,并在一个空白的、大小固定的参照空间上放置一个响应盘。地图有五个不同的大小,产生五个缩放因子(1:3、1:2、1:1、2:1、3:1),允许在一个单一的、综合的设计中研究不同的缩放方向(向上和向下)。目标位置的学习以及响应的准确性和速度作为因变量。我们假设可以使用视觉心理表象的参与者(即晚期盲人参与者和蒙眼视力正常的参与者)可能采用心理转换缩放策略。然而,我们的结果并不支持这一假设。同时,我们预测早期盲人参与者会使用相对距离缩放策略,这一预测得到了我们的发现的支持。此外,我们的结果表明,盲人参与者可以比视力正常的参与者更准确甚至更快地缩放触觉地图。此外,无论视觉状态如何,每个视觉状态组的参与者都将其反应偏向空间的中心。总的来说,似乎缺乏视觉意象并不会损害早期盲人成年人的空间缩放能力,但会导致他们使用不同于视力正常和晚期盲人的策略。