As the world turns: short-term human spatial memory in egocentric and allocentric coordinates


Autoria(s): Banta Lavenex P.; Lecci S.; Prêtre V.; Brandner C.; Mazza C.; Pasquier J.; Lavenex P.
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

We aimed to determine whether human subjects' reliance on different sources of spatial information encoded in different frames of reference (i.e., egocentric versus allocentric) affects their performance, decision time and memory capacity in a short-term spatial memory task performed in the real world. Subjects were asked to play the Memory game (a.k.a. the Concentration game) without an opponent, in four different conditions that controlled for the subjects' reliance on egocentric and/or allocentric frames of reference for the elaboration of a spatial representation of the image locations enabling maximal efficiency. We report experimental data from young adult men and women, and describe a mathematical model to estimate human short-term spatial memory capacity. We found that short-term spatial memory capacity was greatest when an egocentric spatial frame of reference enabled subjects to encode and remember the image locations. However, when egocentric information was not reliable, short-term spatial memory capacity was greater and decision time shorter when an allocentric representation of the image locations with respect to distant objects in the surrounding environment was available, as compared to when only a spatial representation encoding the relationships between the individual images, independent of the surrounding environment, was available. Our findings thus further demonstrate that changes in viewpoint produced by the movement of images placed in front of a stationary subject is not equivalent to the movement of the subject around stationary images. We discuss possible limitations of classical neuropsychological and virtual reality experiments of spatial memory, which typically restrict the sensory information normally available to human subjects in the real world.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_15F08640D931

isbn:1872-7549 (Electronic)

pmid:21237209

doi:10.1016/j.bbr.2010.12.035

isiid:000289664100019

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Behavioural Brain Research, vol. 219, no. 1, pp. 132-141

Palavras-Chave #Adult; Attention/physiology; Computer Graphics; Data Interpretation, Statistical; Decision Making/physiology; Electric Stimulation; Environment; Female; Humans; Male; Memory, Short-Term/physiology; Models, Neurological; Models, Statistical; Neuropsychological Tests; Photic Stimulation; Psychomotor Performance/physiology; Self Concept; Sex Characteristics; Space Perception/physiology; Video Games; Visual Perception/physiology; Young Adult
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article