Mental imagery skills predict the ability in performing environmental directional judgements

01 Pubblicazione su rivista
PICCARDI LAURA, BOCCHI ALESSIA, PALMIERO MASSIMILIANO, Verde Paola, Nori Raffaella
ISSN: 0014-4819

Mental imagery plays a crucial role in several cognitive processes, including human navigation. According to the Kosslyn’s Model, mental imagery is subserved by three components: generation, inspection and transformation. The role of transformation, where by individuals recognise, from a different perspective, a place they have already visited, is no longer a matter of debate. However, the role of the other two components when recalling a map from different perspectives, has never been fully investigated. In the present study, we enrolled forty-nine college students and asked them to learn a schematic map and to provide directional judgements aligned or countersigned compared to the learnt map orientation. Their mental imagery generation, inspection and transformation skills were also investigated. Results demonstrated that all three visual mental imagery components negatively correlate with errors in providing directional judgements. Specifically, generation assumes a role in aligned directional judgements, while inspection and transformation predict
the capability to provide counter-aligned directional judgements. Although all mental imagery components play a
role in mentally recalling a map, only the proficiency in inspection and mental rotation can predict the accuracy in
changing perspective.

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