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Touch and look: The role of visual‐haptic cues for categorical learning in primary school children
Author(s) -
Broadbent Hannah,
Osborne Tamsin,
Kirkham Natasha,
Mareschal Denis
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
infant and child development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.87
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1522-7219
pISSN - 1522-7227
DOI - 10.1002/icd.2168
Subject(s) - haptic technology , psychology , sensory cue , cognitive psychology , generality , categorical variable , task (project management) , visual learning , artificial intelligence , computer science , management , machine learning , economics , psychotherapist
Benefits of synchronous presentation of multisensory compared to unisensory cues are well established. However, the generality of such findings to children's learning with visual and haptic sensory cue pairings is unclear. Children aged 6 to 10 years ( N = 180) participated in a novel tabletop category‐learning paradigm with visual, haptic, or visuohaptic informative cues. The results indicated that combinations of complimentary visual and haptic cues facilitated learning above unisensory visual cues only in 8‐year‐old children. Primarily, however, haptic information was found to dominate children's category learning across ages, particularly in the youngest children (6‐year‐olds), even with equal discriminability of haptic and visual exemplars. These findings suggest developmental changes in the ability to effectively combine unrelated visual and haptic information for categorical learning. Implications for the use of nonpertinent visuohaptic cues in learning tasks within educational settings at different ages, and in particular the dominance of haptic stimuli for children's learning, are discussed. Highlights A novel category learning task examined the role of unisensory and multisensory visual and haptic information in children's learning. Haptic cues dominated learning from 6 to 10 years of age, particularly when combined with visual information in older children. Findings infer protracted development of benefits in combining visuohaptic cues, and dominance of haptic over visual information for category learning.

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