Ecological validity of virtual environments to assess human navigation ability

Publication date

2015

Authors

van der Ham, I. J.M.ISNI 0000000387917681
Faber, Annemarie
Venselaar, Mathhijs
van Kreveld, MarcORCID 0000-0001-8208-3468ISNI 0000000116732175
Löffler, MaartenISNI 000000039666142X

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Route memory is frequently assessed in virtual environments. These environments can be presented in a fully controlled manner and are easy to use. Yet they lack the physical involvement that participants have when navigating real environments. For some aspects of route memory this may result in reduced performance in virtual environments. We assessed route memory performance in four different environments: real, virtual, virtual with directional information (compass), and hybrid. In the hybrid environment, participants walked the route outside on an open field, while all route information (i.e. path, landmarks) was shown simultaneously on a handheld tablet computer. Results indicate that performance in the real life environment was better than in the virtual conditions for tasks relying on survey knowledge, like pointing to start and end point, and map drawing. Performance in the hybrid condition however, hardly differed from real life performance. Performance in the virtual environment did not benefit from directional information. Given these findings, the hybrid condition may offer the best of both worlds: the performance level is comparable to that of real life for route memory, yet it offers full control of visual input during route learning.

Keywords

TRAJ, PSY

Citation

Ham, I V D, Faber, A, Venselaar, M, Kreveld, M V & Löffler, M 2015, 'Ecological validity of virtual environments to assess human navigation ability', Frontiers in Psychology, vol. 6, no. 637. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00637