Effect of Modality-Specific Experience on Visual and Haptic Judgment of Orientation
- 1 December 1985
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Perception
- Vol. 14 (6) , 763-773
- https://doi.org/10.1068/p140763
Abstract
Although the ‘oblique effect’ (poorer performance on oblique orientations as compared to performance on vertical and horizontal orientations) is generally understood as a strictly visual phenomenon, a haptic oblique effect occurs for blindfolded subjects required to set a stimulus rod by hand. Because oblique effects are often attributed to the observer's experience with a predominantly horizontal and vertical environment, we assessed the effect of visual and haptic experience by providing subjects with modality-specific inspection periods to familiarize them with the more poorly judged obliques. Oblique error was significantly reduced in magnitude for judgments made by the modality of experience, and for judgments made across modalities. Rate of improvement, consistency of transfer, and the subjective reports of subjects indicate that this haptic oblique effect is more strongly influenced by visual experience and imagery than by haptic experience. It need not be interpreted as an effect based on factors intrinsic to the haptic modality.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Discrimination of Orientation by Human InfantsPerception, 1981
- The Oblique Effect of Stimulus Identification Considered with Respect to Two Classes of Oblique EffectsPerception, 1980
- Differential effects of task memory demand on haptic matching of shape by blind and sighted humansNeuropsychologia, 1974
- Human information processing and sensory modality: Cross-modal functions, information complexity, memory, and deficit.Psychological Bulletin, 1974
- Human Visual Ecology and Orientation Anisotropies in AcuityScience, 1973
- WHEN ARE VISION AND KINAESTHESIS COMPARABLE?British Journal of Psychology, 1973
- Imagery and Verbalization as Mediators in Tactual-Visual Information ProcessingPerceptual and Motor Skills, 1973
- Perception and discrimination as a function of stimulus orientation: The "oblique effect" in man and animals.Psychological Bulletin, 1972
- Eye and hand: Differential memory and its effect on matchingNeuropsychologia, 1971
- Spatial coding of tactual stimulation.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1969