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  How to find a shortcut within a city? Mental walk vs. mental model

O'Malley, M., Bülthoff, H., & Meilinger, T. (2014). How to find a shortcut within a city? Mental walk vs. mental model. In A. Schütz, K. Drewing, & K. Gegenfurtner (Eds.), 56th Conference of Experimental Psychologists (TeaP 2014) (pp. 194). Lengerich, Germany: Pabst.

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 Creators:
O'Malley, M1, 2, Author           
Bülthoff, HH1, 2, Author           
Meilinger, T1, 2, Author           
Affiliations:
1Department Human Perception, Cognition and Action, Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Max Planck Society, ou_1497797              
2Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Max Planck Society, ou_1497794              

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 Abstract: Survey tasks such as finding novel shortcuts or pointing to distant, non-visible locations within cities or buildings seem to be limited to human navigators. We tested two conflicting explanations for survey tasks. In the mental walk hypothesis familiar routes are represented by hippocampal place cells. Each cell represents one route location and cells are successively activated while
mentally travelling along this route. This process underlies location estimation of distant targets. Its duration depends on place cell number and therefore route length. Contrary, the mental model hypothesis assumes building a mental model of non-visible environment parts without mentally walking there. Model construction is piece-wise, one street after the other. Duration of distant
location estimation depends on the number of streets, not their length. To test these predictions participants learned four unconnected routes through a virtual city by walking on an omnidirectional treadmill. We independently varied route length (120 vs. 360 virtual meters) and
number of turns (2 vs. 6) and measured latency in pointing between route locations after learning. Both route length and number of turns increased pointing latency. Neither hypothesis can fully account for the data. Maybe multiple systems based on vision vs. bodily cues contributed
independently.

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 Dates: 2014-04
 Publication Status: Issued
 Pages: -
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 Table of Contents: -
 Rev. Type: -
 Identifiers: BibTex Citekey: O039MalleyBM2014
DOI: 10.23668/psycharchives.877
 Degree: -

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Title: 56th Conference of Experimental Psychologists (TeaP 2014)
Place of Event: Giessen, Germany
Start-/End Date: 2014-03-31 - 2014-04-02

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Title: 56th Conference of Experimental Psychologists (TeaP 2014)
Source Genre: Proceedings
 Creator(s):
Schütz, AC, Editor
Drewing, K1, Editor           
Gegenfurtner, KR, Editor           
Affiliations:
1 External Organizations, ou_persistent22            
Publ. Info: Lengerich, Germany : Pabst
Pages: - Volume / Issue: - Sequence Number: - Start / End Page: 194 Identifier: ISBN: 978-3-89967-915-1