A developmental dissociation of view-dependent and view-invariant object recognition in adolescence


Autoria(s): Jüttner, Martin; Muller, Alexander; Rentschler, Ingo
Data(s)

15/12/2006

Resumo

Spatial generalization skills in school children aged 8-16 were studied with regard to unfamiliar objects that had been previously learned in a cross-modal priming and learning paradigm. We observed a developmental dissociation with younger children recognizing objects only from previously learnt perspectives whereas older children generalized acquired object knowledge to new viewpoints as well. Haptic and - to a lesser extent - visual priming improved spatial generalization in all but the youngest children. The data supports the idea of dissociable, view-dependent and view-invariant object representations with different developmental trajectories that are subject to modulatory effects of priming. Late-developing areas in the parietal or the prefrontal cortex may account for the retarded onset of view-invariant object recognition. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/8571/1/juttner_muller_rentschler_bbr2006_man.pdf

Jüttner, Martin; Muller, Alexander and Rentschler, Ingo (2006). A developmental dissociation of view-dependent and view-invariant object recognition in adolescence. Behavioural Brain Research, 175 (2), pp. 420-424.

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/8571/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed