Sensory dominance : an experiment across cultures

Physical and intellectual differences in the home environment of Xhosa and White children suggested that the interaction of touch and vision in situations of sensory conflict and the development of dominance may be different in children from these homes. Children aged 5-13 years were tested on appar...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Locke, Hester W
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 1977
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1012744
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-32142017-09-30T04:07:03ZSensory dominance : an experiment across culturesLocke, Hester WPerception -- TestingSenses and sensation -- TestingDominance (Psychology)Physical and intellectual differences in the home environment of Xhosa and White children suggested that the interaction of touch and vision in situations of sensory conflict and the development of dominance may be different in children from these homes. Children aged 5-13 years were tested on apparatus which created a conflict of tactual and visual judgement about the perceived size of the stimulus. Xhosa and White subjects performed similarly except when only tactual judgement was allowed and the Xhosa group were less influenced by touch. The study concludes that for children touch and vision contribute equally to the resolution of sensory conflict when both senses are active in size-judgements and when only one mode is allowed for judging then the resolution is biased towards this mode. This outcome is different from that of experiments with adults and has implications for theories derived from them.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Humanities, Psychology1977ThesisMastersMA110 leavespdfvital:3214http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1012744EnglishLocke, Hester W
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Perception -- Testing
Senses and sensation -- Testing
Dominance (Psychology)
spellingShingle Perception -- Testing
Senses and sensation -- Testing
Dominance (Psychology)
Locke, Hester W
Sensory dominance : an experiment across cultures
description Physical and intellectual differences in the home environment of Xhosa and White children suggested that the interaction of touch and vision in situations of sensory conflict and the development of dominance may be different in children from these homes. Children aged 5-13 years were tested on apparatus which created a conflict of tactual and visual judgement about the perceived size of the stimulus. Xhosa and White subjects performed similarly except when only tactual judgement was allowed and the Xhosa group were less influenced by touch. The study concludes that for children touch and vision contribute equally to the resolution of sensory conflict when both senses are active in size-judgements and when only one mode is allowed for judging then the resolution is biased towards this mode. This outcome is different from that of experiments with adults and has implications for theories derived from them.
author Locke, Hester W
author_facet Locke, Hester W
author_sort Locke, Hester W
title Sensory dominance : an experiment across cultures
title_short Sensory dominance : an experiment across cultures
title_full Sensory dominance : an experiment across cultures
title_fullStr Sensory dominance : an experiment across cultures
title_full_unstemmed Sensory dominance : an experiment across cultures
title_sort sensory dominance : an experiment across cultures
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 1977
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1012744
work_keys_str_mv AT lockehesterw sensorydominanceanexperimentacrosscultures
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