Overshadowing of geometric gues by a beacon in a spatial navigation task.
Overshadowing of geometric gues by a beacon in a spatial navigation task.
In three experiments, we examined whether overshadowing of geometric cues by a discrete landmark (beacon) is due to the relative saliences of the cues. Using a virtual water maze task, human participants were required to locate a platform marked by a beacon in a distinctively shaped pool. In Experiment 1, the beacon overshadowed geometric cues in a trapezium, but not in an isosceles triangle. The longer escape latencies during acquisition in the trapezium control group with no beacon suggest that the geometric cues in the trapezium were less salient than those in the triangle. In Experiment 2, we evaluated whether generalization decrement, caused by the removal of the beacon at test, could account for overshadowing. An additional beacon was placed in an alternative corner. For the control groups, the beacons were identical; for the overshadow groups, they were visually unique. Overshadowing was again found in the trapezium. In Experiment 3, we tested whether the absence of overshadowing in the triangle was due to the geometric cues being more salient than the beacon. Following training, the beacon was relocated to a different corner. Participants approached the beacon rather than the trained platform corner, suggesting that the beacon was more salient. These results suggest that associative processes do not fully explain cue competition in the spatial domain.
179-191
Redhead, Edward
d2342759-2c77-45ef-ac0f-9f70aa5db0df
Hamilton, D.A.
afd98c97-6c14-4223-8ba9-8415144f2e26
Parker, Matthew
a3dd2011-809c-41d2-8669-445a20e3e48b
Chan, W.
27980e6d-0f21-4395-9801-45c0d81984f4
Allison, Craig
46b3ce37-1986-4a23-9385-a54d0abd08d5
June 2013
Redhead, Edward
d2342759-2c77-45ef-ac0f-9f70aa5db0df
Hamilton, D.A.
afd98c97-6c14-4223-8ba9-8415144f2e26
Parker, Matthew
a3dd2011-809c-41d2-8669-445a20e3e48b
Chan, W.
27980e6d-0f21-4395-9801-45c0d81984f4
Allison, Craig
46b3ce37-1986-4a23-9385-a54d0abd08d5
Redhead, Edward, Hamilton, D.A., Parker, Matthew, Chan, W. and Allison, Craig
(2013)
Overshadowing of geometric gues by a beacon in a spatial navigation task.
Learning & Behavior, 41 (2), .
(doi:10.3758/s13420-012-0096-0).
Abstract
In three experiments, we examined whether overshadowing of geometric cues by a discrete landmark (beacon) is due to the relative saliences of the cues. Using a virtual water maze task, human participants were required to locate a platform marked by a beacon in a distinctively shaped pool. In Experiment 1, the beacon overshadowed geometric cues in a trapezium, but not in an isosceles triangle. The longer escape latencies during acquisition in the trapezium control group with no beacon suggest that the geometric cues in the trapezium were less salient than those in the triangle. In Experiment 2, we evaluated whether generalization decrement, caused by the removal of the beacon at test, could account for overshadowing. An additional beacon was placed in an alternative corner. For the control groups, the beacons were identical; for the overshadow groups, they were visually unique. Overshadowing was again found in the trapezium. In Experiment 3, we tested whether the absence of overshadowing in the triangle was due to the geometric cues being more salient than the beacon. Following training, the beacon was relocated to a different corner. Participants approached the beacon rather than the trained platform corner, suggesting that the beacon was more salient. These results suggest that associative processes do not fully explain cue competition in the spatial domain.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 24 November 2012
Published date: June 2013
Additional Information:
Psychonomic Society, Inc. 2012
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Local EPrints ID: 457818
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457818
ISSN: 1543-4494
PURE UUID: 54084367-12ff-40b1-8150-75345dc212a2
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Date deposited: 17 Jun 2022 16:44
Last modified: 30 Apr 2024 01:36
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Author:
D.A. Hamilton
Author:
Matthew Parker
Author:
W. Chan
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