• Title of article

    Learning your way around town: How virtual taxicab drivers learn to use both layout and landmark information

  • Author/Authors

    Newman، نويسنده , , Ehren L. and Caplan، نويسنده , , Jeremy B. and Kirschen، نويسنده , , Matthew P. and Korolev، نويسنده , , Igor O. and Sekuler، نويسنده , , Robert and Kahana، نويسنده , , Michael J.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    23
  • From page
    231
  • To page
    253
  • Abstract
    By having subjects drive a virtual taxicab through a computer-rendered town, we examined how landmark and layout information interact during spatial navigation. Subject-drivers searched for passengers, and then attempted to take the most efficient route to the requested destinations (one of several target stores). Experiment 1 demonstrated that subjects rapidly learn to find direct paths from random pickup locations to target stores. Experiment 2 varied the degree to which landmark and layout cues were preserved across two successively learned towns. When spatial layout was preserved, transfer was low if only target stores were altered, and high if both target stores and surrounding buildings were altered, even though in the latter case all local views were changed. This suggests that subjects can rapidly acquire a survey representation based on the spatial layout of the town and independent of local views, but that subjects will rely on local views when present, and are harmed when associations between previously learned landmarks are disrupted. We propose that spatial navigation reflects a hierarchical system in which either layout or landmark information is sufficient for orienting and wayfinding; however, when these types of cues conflict, landmarks are preferentially used.
  • Keywords
    Navigation , VIRTUAL REALITY , landmark , Spatial memory , LAYOUT , Spatial Learning
  • Journal title
    Cognition
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Cognition
  • Record number

    2076044