Abstract
Spatial relations can be defined with respect to the body (egocentric) or among environmental objects only (allocentric). Egocentric relations are necessarily transformed through bodily action. To what extent allocentric cognitive representations are shaped by the body remains unclear. In our study, participants navigate a virtual-reality (VR) city over multiple days in one of three embodiment conditions. In two VR conditions, the participants sit on a swivel chair actively changing navigation direction through bodily rotation. In one of these groups the VR participants wear a sensory augmentation belt which indicates the cardinal direction of north through vibration. The third group of participants navigates a two-dimensional map of the city. After each exploration session, participants complete tasks asking for allocentric spatial relations. We find that the performance in the spatial tasks interacts with the duration of exploration time and the embodiment condition. These findings indicate allocentric spatial representations to be structured by bodily action.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
This research was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemein-schaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) - project number GRK-2185/1 (DFG Research Training Group Situated Cognition). Nicolas Kuske and Viviane Clay designed the experiment and collected the data. Nicolas Kuske analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript.
to junior researchers for data collection: Justine Winkler, Debora Nolte, Raul Sulaimanov, Laura Duesberg, Kirsten Rittershofer, Markéta Bečevová, Shadi Derakshan, Lara Syrek, Jasmin Walter, Lucas Essmann, Paula Eisenhauer and Valerie Meyer. Kaitlyn Kennedy polished the grammar. Finally, many thanks to all of our study participants.
Abstract and formatting revised