Remembering Places in Space: A Human Analog Study of the Morris Water Maze
Author(s) -
Sylvia Fitting,
Gary L. Allen,
Douglas H. Wedell
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
lecture notes in computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.249
H-Index - 400
eISSN - 1611-3349
pISSN - 0302-9743
ISBN - 3-540-75665-5
DOI - 10.1007/978-3-540-75666-8_4
Subject(s) - morris water navigation task , task (project management) , computer science , space (punctuation) , interval (graph theory) , human memory , artificial intelligence , cognitive psychology , psychology , cognition , mathematics , neuroscience , management , economics , operating system , combinatorics
We conducted a human analog study of the Morris Water Maze, with individuals indicating a remembered location in a 3 m diameter arena over different intervals of time and with different memory loads. The primary focus of the study was to test a theory of how varying cue location and number of cues affects memory for spatial location. As expected, memory performance, as measured by proximity to the actual location, was negatively affected by increasing memory load, increasing delay interval, and decreasing the number of cues. As memory performance decremented, bias effects increased and were in accordance with the cue-based memory model described by Fitting, Wedell and Allen (2005). Specifically, remembered locations were biased toward the nearest cue and error decreased with more cues. These results demonstrate that localization processes that apply to small two-dimensional task fields may generalize to a larger traversable task field.
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