
Are Spatial Memories for Familiar Environments Orientation Dependent?
Author(s) -
Adamantini Hatzipanayioti,
Alexia Galati,
Marianna Pagkratidou,
Marios N. Avraamides
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of cognition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2514-4820
DOI - 10.5334/joc.147
Subject(s) - orientation (vector space) , contrast (vision) , cognitive psychology , situational ethics , psychology , task (project management) , encoding (memory) , spatial ability , computer science , human–computer interaction , communication , social psychology , artificial intelligence , geometry , cognition , mathematics , engineering , neuroscience , systems engineering
In one experiment we examined the organizational structure of spatial memories for familiar environments, comparing it directly with that for unfamiliar environments. Participants in the familiar condition pointed from imagined perspectives towards objects in their own rooms and their performance was compared to that of matched controls in an unfamiliar condition who carried out the same task after studying the same rooms in immersive Virtual Reality. In both conditions, participants were faster and more accurate in pointing from imagined perspectives that were aligned with the geometry of the room (vs. not aligned), suggesting the presence of orientation-dependent representations. Whereas in the unfamiliar condition pointing performance was best along a single axis, performance in the familiar condition was about equal across all 4 orientations that were aligned with the geometric structure of the room. Moreover, performance in the familiar condition was influenced by the orientation from which participants started to preview the room prior to testing; in contrast, in the unfamiliar condition performance was not influenced by the orientation from which encoding started. This finding suggests that post-encoding situational factors (e.g., the starting orientation from which an environment is previewed) can prime the accessibility of information in well-established long-term spatial memories.