Publication | Closed Access
Distance Matters: Spatial Contiguity Effects as Trade‐Off between Gaze Switches and Memory Load
52
Citations
22
References
2012
Year
Memory RetrievalMechanical Pendulum ClockCognitionPerceptionAttentionHuman MemoryVisual Cognitive NeurosciencePsychologySocial SciencesMultimedia LearningComparative Visual SearchVisual CognitionWorking MemoryMemoryVisual Short-term MemoryCognitive NeuroscienceHuman LearningCognitive ScienceVisuomotor LearningSpatial Contiguity EffectsDistance MattersVision ResearchVisual ProcessingVisual FunctionCognitive DynamicsGaze SwitchesEye TrackingSpatial CognitionNeuroscience
Summary The present study combined the approaches of multimedia learning and of comparative visual search (Hardiess, Gillner, & Mallot, 2008) in order to analyse the processing of spatially separated information. Participants were asked to compare two depictions of a mechanical pendulum clock to detect no, one, or two differences between them. The spatial distance between the two depictions was varied, and participants received either stimulus‐related information about the functionalities of pendulum clocks or stimulus‐unrelated information about the design of cuckoo clocks. The study demonstrates a trade‐off between gaze movement and working memory use. We observed fewer gaze shifts with increasing distance between the pictures, suggesting higher working memory use. The findings indicate that the distance between two pictures, domain knowledge and visual working memory span are important factors that determine memory load required for processing split information sources. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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