The Influence of Aging on Perceptual Grouping in Haptic Search

Publication date

2022

Authors

Overvliet, Krista E.ORCID 0000-0002-3537-8172ISNI 0000000396426710

Editors

Seifi, Hasti
Kappers, Astrid M. L.
Schneider, Oliver
Drewing, Knut
Pacchierotti, Claudio
Abbasimoshaei, Alireza
Huisman, Gijs
Kern, Thorsten A.

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Perceptual grouping speeds up haptic search. This has particularly been shown for grouping of distractors by similarity and good continuation [1]. Here, we investigated the effect of aging on grouping in haptic search. We reasoned that because older adults have less cognitive resources available for processing perceptual information, they would benefit more from grouping as compared to younger adults. We tested this hypothesis in a haptic search task in which proximity, similarity and good continuation of the distractors were manipulated. We found that older adults indeed show a larger effect of distractor similarity on search times as compared to younger adults, where similar dis- tractors were processed faster than dissimilar distractors. However, older adults showed an opposite effect of grouping by proximity, where items that were further apart were processed faster. This may be caused by a strong bowed spatial position effect in older adults: stimuli that are closer to each other are more difficult to discriminate. We conclude that haptic perceptual grouping by similarity has larger benefits in elderly as compared to younger adults.

Keywords

haptics, perception, human, aging

Citation

Overvliet, K 2022, The Influence of Aging on Perceptual Grouping in Haptic Search. in H Seifi, A M L Kappers, O Schneider, K Drewing, C Pacchierotti, A Abbasimoshaei, G Huisman & T A Kern (eds), Haptics: Science, Technology, Applications : 13th International Conference on Human Haptic Sensing and Touch Enabled Computer Applications, EuroHaptics 2022, Hamburg, Germany, May 22–25, 2022, Proceedings. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol. 13235, Springer, pp. 468-471. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-06249-0