scholarly journals The match in orientation between verbal context and object accelerates change detection

Psihologija ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-105
Author(s):  
Andrei Holman ◽  
Alexandra Gîrbă

Research in the field of embodied cognition has shown that sensorimotor simulation significantly influences various aspects of cognitive processing. This experiment was designed to test the impact of the sensorimotor simulation of objects? physical proprieties, initiated by the preceding verbal context, on change detection performance. Before performing each of change detection trials, participants were exposed to sentences suggesting a particular object orientation (horizontal or vertical). The orientation in the first display of the objects that were to be replaced in the second was also manipulated. Response latencies results show that the sentences implying the same spatial orientation as that of the to-be-changed object led to a faster detection of its change compared to the sentences that implied the mismatching orientation, an effect that we explain in terms of the superior encoding, facilitated by sensorimotor simulation, of the objects with matching orientation.

Author(s):  
Amy L. Alexander ◽  
Christopher D. Wickens

Twenty-four certified flight instructors were required to fly a series of curved, step-down approaches while detecting changes to surrounding traffic aircraft and weather cell icons on two integrated hazard display (IHD) formats (2D coplanar and split-screen) under varying workload levels. Generally, it appears that the 2D coplanar IHD was better in supporting flightpath tracking and change detection performance when compared to a split-screen display. Pilots exhibited superior flightpath tracking (in the vertical dimension, and under low workload) when using the 2D coplanar IHD, although this effect was mitigated by increasing workload such that tracking deteriorated faster with the 2D coplanar than the split-screen display. The spawned 3D cost of diminished size with distance from ownship played a role in change detection response time—pilots were slower (particularly in detecting traffic aircraft changes) with the split-screen compared to the 2D coplanar IHD. These effects will be discussed within the context of visual scanning measures.


2010 ◽  
Vol 50 (20) ◽  
pp. 2062-2068 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eckart Zimmermann ◽  
Fabian Schnier ◽  
Markus Lappe

Author(s):  
Viet T. Vu ◽  
Mats I. Pettersson ◽  
Bruna G. Palm ◽  
Dimas I. Alves ◽  
Natanael R. Gomes

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