2012
DOI: 10.3758/s13414-012-0393-x
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The effect of vertical and horizontal symmetry on memory for tactile patterns in late blind individuals

Abstract: Visual stimuli that exhibit vertical symmetry are easier to remember than stimuli symmetric along other axes, an advantage that extends to the haptic modality as well. Critically, the vertical symmetry memory advantage has not been found in early blind individuals, despite their overall superior memory, as compared with sighted individuals, and the presence of an overall advantage for identifying symmetric over asymmetric patterns. The absence of the vertical axis memory advantage in the early blind may depend… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
(57 reference statements)
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“…Given that symmetry affords grouping, the effect may arise because the presence of paired structures increases the perceptual salience of the haptically explored pattern [36,37]. Our findings indicate that symmetry facilitates the tactile processing of stimuli, even when it is an incidental encoding property and participants' attention is not focused on this property, because participants were not informed that some configurations would be symmetric.…”
Section: Haptic Detection Of Symmetry In Blind Participantsmentioning
confidence: 70%
See 4 more Smart Citations
“…Given that symmetry affords grouping, the effect may arise because the presence of paired structures increases the perceptual salience of the haptically explored pattern [36,37]. Our findings indicate that symmetry facilitates the tactile processing of stimuli, even when it is an incidental encoding property and participants' attention is not focused on this property, because participants were not informed that some configurations would be symmetric.…”
Section: Haptic Detection Of Symmetry In Blind Participantsmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Although haptic object and picture recognition have been extensively studied in the blind, only recently has symmetry detection been specifically investigated in early and late blind individuals [36][37][38].…”
Section: Haptic Detection Of Symmetry In Blind Participantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations