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-List Of Titles -Keeping track of invisible individuals while exploring a spatial layout with partial cues : location-based and deictic direction-based strategies

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/115722

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Title
Keeping track of invisible individuals while exploring a spatial layout with partial cues : location-based and deictic direction-based strategies
Related
Philosophical psychology, Vol. 21, Issue 1 (2008), p.15-46
DOI
10.1080/09515080701840861
Publisher
United Kingdom : Routledge
Date
2008
Author/Creator
Bullot, Nicolas J
Author/Creator
Droulez, Jacques
Description
In contrast to Constructivist Views, which construe perceptual cognition as an essentially reconstructive process, this article recommends the Deictic View, which grounds perception in perceptual-demonstrative reference and the use of deictic tracking strategies for acquiring and updating knowledge about individuals. The view raises the problem of how sensory-motor tracking connects to epistemic and integrated forms of tracking. To study the strategies used to solve this problem, we report a study of the ability to track distal individuals when only their directions can be perceived and not their locations. We introduce a new experimental paradigm named the 'Modified Traveling Salesman Problem' (MTSP), which requires subjects to visit n invisible targets in a 2D display once each. Surprisingly, subjects are competent at this task for up to 10 targets. We consider two types of tracking strategies that subjects might use: 'location-based' strategies and 'deictic direction-based' strategies. A number of observations suggest that subjects used the latter, at least for larger numbers of targets. We hypothesize that subjects used perceptual-demonstrative reference and deictic strategies (i) to perform the sensory-motor tracking of directional segments, (ii) to bind the segments with their updated status in the task, and (iii) to perform the epistemic tracking of invisible targets by means of perception-based inferences.
Description
32 page(s)
Subject Keyword
deictic strategies
Subject Keyword
demonstrative reference
Subject Keyword
direction
Subject Keyword
identification
Subject Keyword
location
Subject Keyword
predicate
Subject Keyword
perceptual inference
Subject Keyword
spatial memory
Subject Keyword
tracking
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Macquarie Centre for Cognitive Science

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/115722
Identifier
ISSN:0951-5089
Identifier
mq_res-20110328-152017
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
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Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Philosophical psychology"
 
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