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Integration of visual landmark cues in spatial memory

Phillip Newman, Timothy P. McNamara

2021Psychological Research26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Over the past two decades, much research has been conducted to investigate whether humans are optimal when integrating sensory cues during spatial memory and navigational tasks. Although this work has consistently demonstrated optimal integration of visual cues (e.g., landmarks) with body-based cues (e.g., path integration) during human navigation, little work has investigated how cues of the same sensory type are integrated in spatial memory. A few recent studies have reported mixed results, with some showing very little benefit to having access to more than one landmark, and others showing that multiple landmarks can be optimally integrated in spatial memory. In the current study, we employed a combination of immersive and non-immersive virtual reality spatial memory tasks to test adult humans' ability to integrate multiple landmark cues across six experiments. Our results showed that optimal integration of multiple landmark cues depends on the difficulty of the task, and that the presence of multiple landmarks can elicit an additional latent cue when estimating locations from a ground-level perspective, but not an aerial perspective.

Topics & Concepts

LandmarkSensory cuePath integrationPerspective (graphical)Spatial memoryComputer scienceSensory systemTask (project management)Cognitive psychologyArtificial intelligenceComputer visionPsychologyWorking memoryCognitionNeuroscienceEconomicsManagementSpatial Cognition and NavigationChild and Animal Learning DevelopmentCategorization, perception, and language