Conference Paper 2018

Humans Construct Survey Estimates on the Fly from a Compartmentalised Representation of the Navigated Environment

{Despite its relevance for navigation surprisingly little is known about how goal direction bearings to distant locations are computed. Behavioural and neuroscientific models proposing the path integration of previously navigated routes are supported indirectly by neural data, but behavioral evidence is lacking. We show that humans integrate navigated routes post-hoc and incrementally while conducting goal direction estimates. Participants learned a multi-corridor layout by walking through a virtual environment. Throughout learning, participants repeatedly performed pairwise pointing from the start location, end location, and each turn location between segments. Pointing latency increased with the number of corridors to the target and decreased with pointing experience rather than environmental familiarity. Bimodal pointing distributions indicate that participants made systematic errors, for example, mixing up turns or forgetting segments. Modeling these error sources suggests that pointing did not rely on one unified, but rather multiple representations of the experimental environment. We conclude that participants performed incremental on-the-fly calculations of goal direction estimates within compartmentalised representations, which was quicker for nearby goals and became faster with repeated pointing. Within navigated environments humans do not compute difference vectors from coordinates of a globally consistent integrated \textquotedblleftmap in the head\textquotedblright.}

Author(s): Meilinger, T and Henson, A and Rebane, J and Bülthoff, HH and Mallot, HA
Book Title: Spatial Cognition XI: 11th International Conference, Spatial Cognition 2018, Tübingen, Germany, September 5-8, 2018
Volume: 11034
Pages: 15--26
Year: 2018
Series: {Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence}
Publisher: Springer
Bibtex Type: Conference Paper (inproceedings)
Address: Tübingen, Germany
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-96385-3\textunderscore2
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@inproceedings{item_2632687,
  title = {{Humans Construct Survey Estimates on the Fly from a Compartmentalised Representation of the Navigated Environment}},
  booktitle = {{Spatial Cognition XI: 11th International Conference, Spatial Cognition 2018, T\"ubingen, Germany, September 5-8, 2018}},
  abstract = {{Despite its relevance for navigation surprisingly little is known about how goal direction bearings to distant locations are computed. Behavioural and neuroscientific models proposing the path integration of previously navigated routes are supported indirectly by neural data, but behavioral evidence is lacking. We show that humans integrate navigated routes post-hoc and incrementally while conducting goal direction estimates. Participants learned a multi-corridor layout by walking through a virtual environment. Throughout learning, participants repeatedly performed pairwise pointing from the start location, end location, and each turn location between segments. Pointing latency increased with the number of corridors to the target and decreased with pointing experience rather than environmental familiarity. Bimodal pointing distributions indicate that participants made systematic errors, for example, mixing up turns or forgetting segments. Modeling these error sources suggests that pointing did not rely on one unified, but rather multiple representations of the experimental environment. We conclude that participants performed incremental on-the-fly calculations of goal direction estimates within compartmentalised representations, which was quicker for nearby goals and became faster with repeated pointing. Within navigated environments humans do not compute difference vectors from coordinates of a globally consistent integrated \textquotedblleftmap in the head\textquotedblright.}},
  volume = {11034},
  pages = {15--26},
  series = {{Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence}},
  publisher = {Springer},
  address = {T\"ubingen, Germany},
  year = {2018},
  slug = {item_2632687},
  author = {Meilinger, T and Henson, A and Rebane, J and B\"ulthoff, HH and Mallot, HA}
}