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      Construction of cognitive maps to improve e-book reading and navigation

      , ,
      Computers & Education
      Elsevier BV

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          Most cited references34

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          Contextual cueing: implicit learning and memory of visual context guides spatial attention.

          Global context plays an important, but poorly understood, role in visual tasks. This study demonstrates that a robust memory for visual context exists to guide spatial attention. Global context was operationalized as the spatial layout of objects in visual search displays. Half of the configurations were repeated across blocks throughout the entire session, and targets appeared within consistent locations in these arrays. Targets appearing in learned configurations were detected more quickly. This newly discovered form of search facilitation is termed contextual cueing. Contextual cueing is driven by incidentally learned associations between spatial configurations (context) and target locations. This benefit was obtained despite chance performance for recognizing the configurations, suggesting that the memory for context was implicit. The results show how implicit learning and memory of visual context can guide spatial attention towards task-relevant aspects of a scene.
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            Hypertext: An Introduction and Survey

            Conklin (1987)
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              Do humans integrate routes into a cognitive map? Map- versus landmark-based navigation of novel shortcuts.

              Do humans integrate experience on specific routes into metric survey knowledge of the environment, or do they depend on a simpler strategy of landmark navigation? The authors tested this question using a novel shortcut paradigm during walking in a virtual environment. The authors find that participants could not take successful shortcuts in a desert world but could do so with dispersed landmarks in a forest. On catch trials, participants were drawn toward the displaced landmarks whether the landmarks were clustered near the target location or along the shortcut route. However, when landmarks appeared unreliable, participants fell back on coarse survey knowledge. Like honeybees (F. C. Dyer, 1991), humans do not appear to derive accurate cognitive maps from path integration to guide navigation but, instead, depend on landmarks when they are available.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Computers & Education
                Computers & Education
                Elsevier BV
                03601315
                January 2013
                January 2013
                : 60
                : 1
                : 32-39
                Article
                10.1016/j.compedu.2012.07.010
                c466db40-6480-430f-9d7e-db7afbaf26f8
                © 2013

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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