Revisiting Perspective-Taking: Can People Maintain Imagined Perspectives?
Ημερομηνία
2013Source
Spatial Cognition and ComputationVolume
13Issue
1Pages
50-78Google Scholar check
Metadata
Εμφάνιση πλήρους εγγραφήςΕπιτομή
Three experiments were conducted to examine whether people can adopt and maintain imagined perspectives in the absence of target information. The task used entailed providing information about an imagined perspective in advance of target information to examine whether this would facilitate perspective-taking performance and reduce or eliminate alignment effects that are commonly reported in the literature. The three experiments employed different types of spatial environments: an environment learned from navigating a computer screen (Experiment 1), and an immersive environment that was either remote (Experiment 2) or immediate (Experiment 3) at the time of retrieval. Across the three experiments, results showed that information about an imagined perspective can be utilized ahead of target information. Furthermore, they suggested that alignment effects can be reduced as a result of processing information about perspective ahead of target information, but only when reasoning about specific nonimmediate spatial relations (Experiments 1 and 2). Results are discussed in connection with previous findings on spatial updating and the organizational structure of spatial memory. © 2013 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.