Dissociating viewpoint costs in mental rotation and object recognition.
نویسندگان
چکیده
In a mental rotation task, participants must determine whether two stimuli match when one undergoes a rotation in 3-D space relative to the other. The key evidence for mental rotation is the finding of a linear increase in response times as objects are rotated farther apart. This signature increase in response times is also found in recognition of rotated objects, which has led many theorists to postulate mental rotation as a key transformational procedure in object recognition. We compared mental rotation and object recognition in tasks that used the same stimuli and presentation conditions and found that, whereas mental rotation costs increased relatively linearly with rotation, object recognition costs increased only over small rotations. Taken in conjunction with a recent brain imaging study, this dissociation in behavioral performance suggests that object recognition is based on matching of image features rather than on 3-D mental transformations.
منابع مشابه
Dissociating viewpoint costs in mental rotation and object recognition
Starting from the early 1970s, Shepard and colleagues (Shepard & Cooper, 1982; Shepard & Judd, 1976; Shepard & Metzler, 1971) conducted a series of experiments showing that mental transformations of 2-D shapes and 3-D objects appeared to follow the same laws as physical transformations of real objects. This finding of mental rotation was a cornerstone in the foundations of the emerging field of...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Psychonomic bulletin & review
دوره 13 5 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2006