Spatial perspective taking: Coordination of left-right and near-far spatial dimensions |
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Authors: | Terri Lomenick Jacobsen Harriet Salatas Waters |
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Affiliation: | State University of New York, Stony Brook, USA |
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Abstract: | Second- and fourth-grade children viewed a cylindrical object in nine positions on a square display board marked with a 3 × 3 grid. As the object was placed in each position, children identified the view from 90, 180, or 270° positions around the display from a set of photographs. Perspectives in which the object differed from the child's view in both left-right and near-far dimensions were more difficult than perspectives that only transformed one dimension. Error rates decreased with age. There were no main effects of left-right vs near-far or of observer position. Rates of egocentric responding were high at both ages. We note that the complementary spatial dimension to left-right is near-far not front-back. Moreover, the relative ease of front-back transformations in previous research resulted from distinctive front-back cues on the display objects which enabled subjects to use nonspatial strategies to identify observer perspectives. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be sent to Dr. Harriet Waters Department of Psychology State University of New York Stony Brook NY 11794. |
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