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Evidence for two types of spatial representations: Hemispheric specialization for categorical and coordinate relations.
447
Citations
17
References
1989
Year
Object CategorizationNeurolinguisticsCognitionRight CerebralPerceptionSpatial RepresentationsAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyEarly VisionVisual CognitionSpatialtemporal ReasoningCognitive NeurosciencePerception SystemSpatial ReasoningSpatial ScienceSpatial TheoryCognitive ScienceCoordinate RelationsHemispheric SpecializationVisual ProcessingSpatial Relation RepresentationsSpatial CognitionNeuroscienceHuman Vision
Analyses of human object recognition abilities led to the hypothesis that 2 kinds of spatial relation representations are used in human vision. Evidence for the distinction between abstract categorical spatial relation representations and specific coordinate spatial relation representations was provided in 4 experiments. These results indicate that Ss make categorical judgments--on/off, left/right, and above/below--faster when stimuli are initially presented to the left cerebral hemisphere, whereas they make evaluations of distance--in relation to 2 mm, 3 mm, or 1 in. (2.54 cm)--faster when stimuli are initially presented to the right cerebral hemisphere. In addition, there was evidence that categorical representations developed with practice.
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