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Boundaries in Spatial Cognition: Looking like a Boundary is More Important than Being a Boundary

James Negen, Angela Sandri, Sang Ah Lee, Marko Nardini
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/391037
James Negen
1Department of Psychology, Durham University, Durham, UK
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  • For correspondence: james.negen@durham.ac.uk
Angela Sandri
2Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Sciences, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
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Sang Ah Lee
3Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Daejeon, Korea
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Marko Nardini
1Department of Psychology, Durham University, Durham, UK
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ABSTRACT

Large walls and other typical boundaries strongly influence neural activity related to navigation and the representations of spatial layouts. They are also major aids to reliable navigation behavior in young children and non-human animals. Is this because they are physical boundaries (barriers to movement), or because they present certain visual features, such as visually extended 3D surfaces? Here, these two factors were dissociated by using immersive virtual reality and real boundaries. Eighty adults recalled target locations in one of four environments: plywood, where a virtual wall coincided with a large piece of real plywood; pass through, where the virtual wall coincided with empty space and participants could pass through it; pass over, where the virtual wall was projected downward to be visible underneath a transparent floor; and cones, where the walls were replaced with traffic cones. One condition had features that were boundaries and looked like boundaries (plywood); two had features that were not boundaries but looked like boundaries (pass over/through); and one had features that were not boundaries and did not look like boundaries (cones). The precision and bias of responses changed only as a function of looking like a boundary. This suggests that variations in spatial coding are more closely linked to the visual properties of environmental layouts than to whether they contain physical boundaries (barriers to movement).

Footnotes

  • Introduction re-worked heavily for clarity; new, simpler analysis featured in results; revisions to Discussion to fit better with new introduction.

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission.
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Posted June 12, 2019.
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Boundaries in Spatial Cognition: Looking like a Boundary is More Important than Being a Boundary
James Negen, Angela Sandri, Sang Ah Lee, Marko Nardini
bioRxiv 391037; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/391037
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Boundaries in Spatial Cognition: Looking like a Boundary is More Important than Being a Boundary
James Negen, Angela Sandri, Sang Ah Lee, Marko Nardini
bioRxiv 391037; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/391037

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