Experience Influences Affordance Perception for Low Crawling Under Barriers With Altered Body Dimensions |
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Authors: | Shaziela Ishak Adam B. Assoian Steve Rincon |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Social Science and Human Services, Ramapo College of New Jersey;2. sishak@ramapo.edu;4. Department of Psychology, Marywood University |
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Abstract: | AbstractWe examined the role of experience in affordance perception for low crawling with altered body dimensions under barriers of different heights. Adults decided which of five backpacks (10–30?cm thick) they would be able to wear while low crawling under barriers. Participants were assigned to one of three experience conditions. Participants in the Pre/Post-choice experience condition crawled under the barrier before and after picking a backpack, participants in the Feedback condition crawled under the barrier after picking a backpack, but participants in the No Experience condition received no low-crawling experience. Past research suggests that pre-choice experience with low crawling under the barrier would lead to more accurate responses. Overall, participants in all three conditions scaled the height of the backpack to the barrier height. Pre-choice low-crawling experience strongly influenced backpack choices such that participants in the Pre/Post condition picked significantly smaller backpacks and produced fewer failures than participants in the other conditions. The results provide evidence that brief practice, in an unfamiliar posture, can lead to improvements in affordance perception. |
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Keywords: | decision making load carriage recalibration practice |
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