Delay improves performance on a haptic spatial matching task

Publication date

2003

Authors

Zuidhoek, S.
Kappers, A.M.L.
Lubbe, R.H.J. van der
Postma, A.

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Document Type

Article

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Abstract

Systematic deviations occur when blindfolded subjects set a test bar parallel to a reference bar in the horizontal plane using haptic information (Kappers and Koenderink 1999, Perception 28:781–795; Kappers 1999, Perception 28:1001–1012). These deviations are assumed to reflect the use of a combination of a biasing egocentric reference frame and an allocentric, more cognitive one (Kappers 2002, Acta Psychol 109:25–40). In two experiments, we have examined the effect of delay between the perception of a reference bar and the parallel setting of a test bar. In both experiments a 10-s delay improved performance. The improvement increased with a larger horizontal (left–right) distance between the bars. This improvement was interpreted as a shift from the egocentric towards the allocentric reference frame during the delay period.

Keywords

haptic perception, spatial representation, frames of reference, parallelity, delay

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