2013
DOI: 10.1002/acp.2909
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Spatial Mental Models: The Interaction of Presentation Format, Task Requirements and Availability of Working Memory Components

Abstract: Two experiments investigate how people create spatial mental models (SMMs) as a function of presentation format. Spatial representations following a route within a virtual environment (visual) and an auditory description (verbal) were compared. Moreover, a dual-task procedure was adopted to depict the role of working memory (WM) components in such a task. Two testing formats were examined in both experiments: sentence verification (verbal) and sketch map (visual) tasks. This study shows that both presentations… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…In this respect, as shown below, the way in which we study representations can determine what we can learn about them. Such differences between verbal and non-verbal knowledge have been indeed observed in adults (see e.g., Gras et al, 2013 ; Picucci et al, 2013 ). They should also be observed in children whose visuo-spatial and verbal abilities are developing at the same time.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…In this respect, as shown below, the way in which we study representations can determine what we can learn about them. Such differences between verbal and non-verbal knowledge have been indeed observed in adults (see e.g., Gras et al, 2013 ; Picucci et al, 2013 ). They should also be observed in children whose visuo-spatial and verbal abilities are developing at the same time.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…Since the way in which spatial information is presented can influence our mental representation of it (e.g., Picucci et al, 2013), two path learning conditions were presented: one involved learning from observation (Observation condition), in which participants watched a person move through a sequence of squares (as in Piccardi et al, 2014); in the other participants learned from a map (Map condition), showing the cells in the grid involved in the sequence of steps. This solution was chosen based on the evidence that children aged 3-5 years understand the representative function of maps in showing a correspondence with a larger space (e.g., Frick and Newcombe, 2012), although they have trouble with handling it flexibly (rotating it, for example; Vosmik and Presson, 2004).…”
Section: Rationale and Aims Of The Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Human beings learn real-life environments by sensing and moving through the environment: this results in first-hand environmental experiences or internal knowledge (Costa & Bonetti, 2018; Montello, 2009). Alternatively, they can acquire information via symbolic sources, through interaction with visual and verbal artifacts (external knowledge), such as paper/digital maps or verbal descriptions of environments (Bosco, Longoni, & Vecchi, 2004; Meilinger, Frankenstein, & Bülthoff, 2013; Montello & Freundschuh, 1995; Picucci, Gyselinck, Piolino, Nicolas, & Bosco, 2013; van Asselen, Fritschy, & Postma, 2006).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%