TY - JOUR
T1 - Correlates of implicit cognitive line length representation in two-dimensional space
AU - Doty, Richard L.
AU - Koti, Ajay
AU - Landy, Jeffrey
AU - Shin, Christina
AU - O’Hara, Thomas A.
AU - Silas, Jonathan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Perceptual & Motor Skills 2014.
PY - 2014/10/1
Y1 - 2014/10/1
N2 - Twenty-eight sex- and age-matched participants, half dextrals and half sinstrals, were instructed to move a pen-sized planometer three inches (7.6 cm) while blindfolded. Under separate trials, movements were made at four angles, towards and away from the body, and at two distances from the body (30 cm, 53 cm). Half were made with the right hand and half with the left hand. Line estimates increased in length across blocks of trials in a linear fashion and progressively overestimated the three-inch imagined criterion. Lines made moving towards the body were longer than those made moving away from the body, implying an egocentric frame of reference in making the estimates. Line estimates made at an oblique angle differed significantly from estimates made at other angles. No influences of sex, handedness, or the hand used in making the estimates were observed. The findings suggest that motoric estimates of line lengths made without visual cues—a unique measure of an implicit cognitive concept—are significantly altered by temporal and spatial factors, but not by sex or hemispheric laterality.
AB - Twenty-eight sex- and age-matched participants, half dextrals and half sinstrals, were instructed to move a pen-sized planometer three inches (7.6 cm) while blindfolded. Under separate trials, movements were made at four angles, towards and away from the body, and at two distances from the body (30 cm, 53 cm). Half were made with the right hand and half with the left hand. Line estimates increased in length across blocks of trials in a linear fashion and progressively overestimated the three-inch imagined criterion. Lines made moving towards the body were longer than those made moving away from the body, implying an egocentric frame of reference in making the estimates. Line estimates made at an oblique angle differed significantly from estimates made at other angles. No influences of sex, handedness, or the hand used in making the estimates were observed. The findings suggest that motoric estimates of line lengths made without visual cues—a unique measure of an implicit cognitive concept—are significantly altered by temporal and spatial factors, but not by sex or hemispheric laterality.
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U2 - 10.2466/24.PMS.119c23z1
DO - 10.2466/24.PMS.119c23z1
M3 - Article
C2 - 25244556
AN - SCOPUS:84908227477
SN - 0031-5125
VL - 119
SP - 550
EP - 563
JO - Perceptual and motor skills
JF - Perceptual and motor skills
IS - 2
ER -