Original article The effect of three-dimensional imaging of well-known objects on time and accuracy of mental rotation

Background The purpose of this study was to verify hypotheses concerning the effect of three-dimensional imaging and the canonicity of objects presented in the original position on the reaction time (RT) and the accuracy (A) of mental rotation task (MRT) execution. The classical paradigm of MRT, d...

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Main Author: Piotr Francuz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Termedia Publishing House 2014-07-01
Series:Health Psychology Report
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.termedia.pl/Original-article-The-effect-of-three-dimensional-imaging-of-well-known-objects-on-time-and-accuracy-of-mental-rotation,74,23111,1,1.html
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spelling doaj-1626385042804d218b680cb5bdc17b092020-11-24T23:39:35ZengTermedia Publishing HouseHealth Psychology Report2353-41842353-55712014-07-0122909810.5114/hpr.2014.4391523111Original article The effect of three-dimensional imaging of well-known objects on time and accuracy of mental rotationPiotr FrancuzBackground The purpose of this study was to verify hypotheses concerning the effect of three-dimensional imaging and the canonicity of objects presented in the original position on the reaction time (RT) and the accuracy (A) of mental rotation task (MRT) execution. The classical paradigm of MRT, developed by Shepard and Metzler (1971), was used in the experiment. Participants and procedure One hundred fifty-eight undergraduate students (88 female and 70 male), aged 18-30 years, participated in the experiment. All participants had normal vision or corrected vision, and reported no stereo blindness. The sequential version of the MRT was used in the experiment. Participants answered whether the object observed in the second position was only rotated or both rotated and mirror-reversed, in comparison to its original position. The answer (accuracy) and its latency (RT) were recorded. Results As predicted by the mental rotation model, both the “U”-shaped A-MRT distribution and the inverted “U”-shaped RT-MRT distribution were found, due to the angular disparity. For the RT-MRT, this effect was more pronounced when the objects were displayed stereoscopically than in a plane, and when the objects were presented in the original position from the canonical orientation rather than an unusual point of view. On the other hand, in the case of the A-MRT, an effect of the orientation of objects presented in the original position on strengthening the relationship between accuracy and angular disparity was found. Conclusions The results indicated that the interactions between the presentation of the objects in the mental rotation task (stereoscopically vs. in a plane) and the orientation of the object in its original position (canonically vs. unusual) are more complicated than would appear from predictions of classical theories of mental rotation. The results of this study are discussed in relation to the theories of recognition and categorization.http://www.termedia.pl/Original-article-The-effect-of-three-dimensional-imaging-of-well-known-objects-on-time-and-accuracy-of-mental-rotation,74,23111,1,1.htmlmental rotation canonical orientation stereoscopic presentation three-dimensional natural objects
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Piotr Francuz
spellingShingle Piotr Francuz
Original article The effect of three-dimensional imaging of well-known objects on time and accuracy of mental rotation
Health Psychology Report
mental rotation
canonical orientation
stereoscopic presentation
three-dimensional natural objects
author_facet Piotr Francuz
author_sort Piotr Francuz
title Original article The effect of three-dimensional imaging of well-known objects on time and accuracy of mental rotation
title_short Original article The effect of three-dimensional imaging of well-known objects on time and accuracy of mental rotation
title_full Original article The effect of three-dimensional imaging of well-known objects on time and accuracy of mental rotation
title_fullStr Original article The effect of three-dimensional imaging of well-known objects on time and accuracy of mental rotation
title_full_unstemmed Original article The effect of three-dimensional imaging of well-known objects on time and accuracy of mental rotation
title_sort original article the effect of three-dimensional imaging of well-known objects on time and accuracy of mental rotation
publisher Termedia Publishing House
series Health Psychology Report
issn 2353-4184
2353-5571
publishDate 2014-07-01
description Background The purpose of this study was to verify hypotheses concerning the effect of three-dimensional imaging and the canonicity of objects presented in the original position on the reaction time (RT) and the accuracy (A) of mental rotation task (MRT) execution. The classical paradigm of MRT, developed by Shepard and Metzler (1971), was used in the experiment. Participants and procedure One hundred fifty-eight undergraduate students (88 female and 70 male), aged 18-30 years, participated in the experiment. All participants had normal vision or corrected vision, and reported no stereo blindness. The sequential version of the MRT was used in the experiment. Participants answered whether the object observed in the second position was only rotated or both rotated and mirror-reversed, in comparison to its original position. The answer (accuracy) and its latency (RT) were recorded. Results As predicted by the mental rotation model, both the “U”-shaped A-MRT distribution and the inverted “U”-shaped RT-MRT distribution were found, due to the angular disparity. For the RT-MRT, this effect was more pronounced when the objects were displayed stereoscopically than in a plane, and when the objects were presented in the original position from the canonical orientation rather than an unusual point of view. On the other hand, in the case of the A-MRT, an effect of the orientation of objects presented in the original position on strengthening the relationship between accuracy and angular disparity was found. Conclusions The results indicated that the interactions between the presentation of the objects in the mental rotation task (stereoscopically vs. in a plane) and the orientation of the object in its original position (canonically vs. unusual) are more complicated than would appear from predictions of classical theories of mental rotation. The results of this study are discussed in relation to the theories of recognition and categorization.
topic mental rotation
canonical orientation
stereoscopic presentation
three-dimensional natural objects
url http://www.termedia.pl/Original-article-The-effect-of-three-dimensional-imaging-of-well-known-objects-on-time-and-accuracy-of-mental-rotation,74,23111,1,1.html
work_keys_str_mv AT piotrfrancuz originalarticletheeffectofthreedimensionalimagingofwellknownobjectsontimeandaccuracyofmentalrotation
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