Mental Rotation of a Tactile Layout by Young Visually Impaired Children

Mental rotation tasks have been used to probe the mental imagery both of sighted and of visually impaired people. People who have been blind since birth display a response pattern which is qualitatively similar to that of sighted people but tend to respond more slowly or with a higher error rate. It has been suggested that visually impaired people code the stimulus and its (or their own) motion in a different way from sighted people—in particular, congenitally blind people may ignore the external reference framework provided by the stimulus and surrounding objects, and instead use body-centred or movement-based coding systems. What has not been considered before is the relationship between different strategies for tactually exploring the stimulus and the response pattern of congenitally blind participants. Congenitally blind and partially sighted children were tested for their ability to learn and recall a layout of tactile symbols. Children explored layouts of one, three, or five shapes which they then attempted to reproduce. On half the trials there was a short pause between exploring and reproducing the layouts. In an aligned condition children reproduced the array from the same position at which they had explored it; in a rotated condition children were asked to move 90° round the table between exploring and reproducing the layout. Both congenitally blind and partially sighted children were less accurate in the rotated condition than in the aligned condition. Five distinct strategies used by the children in learning the layout were identified. These strategies interacted with both visual status and age. We suggest that the use of strategies, rather than visual status or chronological age, accounts for differences in performance between children.

[1]  R. Shepard,et al.  Mental Rotation of Three-Dimensional Objects , 1971, Science.

[2]  E. Berlá,et al.  Behavioral Strategies and Problems in Scanning and Interpreting Tactual Displays. , 1972 .

[3]  Edward P. Berla Strategies in Scanning a Tactual Pseudomap. , 1973 .

[4]  S. Millar Tactile short-term memory by blind and sighted children. , 1974, British journal of psychology.

[5]  Stephen Michael Kosslyn,et al.  Information representation in visual images , 1975, Cognitive Psychology.

[6]  S. Millar Spatial memory by blind and sighted children. , 1975, British journal of psychology.

[7]  Marvin J. Murr,et al.  Tactual Reading of Political Maps by Blind Students , 1976 .

[8]  S Millar,et al.  Spatial representation by blind and sighted children. , 1976, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[9]  A. Danto Action, Knowledge, and Representation , 1976 .

[10]  G. S. Marmor,et al.  Mental rotation by the blind: does mental rotation depend on visual imagery? , 1976, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[11]  E. Berlá,et al.  Tactual Distinctive Features Analysis: Training Blind Students in Shape Recognition and in Locating Shapes On a Map , 1977 .

[12]  P. Carpenter,et al.  Mental rotation and the frame of reference in blind and sighted individuals , 1978, Perception & psychophysics.

[13]  S M Kosslyn,et al.  Visual images preserve metric spatial information: evidence from studies of image scanning. , 1978, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[14]  S Millar,et al.  The Utilization of External and Movement Cues in Simple Spatial Tasks by Blind and Sighted Children , 1979, Perception.

[15]  Edward P. Berla Tactile Scanning and Memory for a Spatial Display By Blind Students , 1981 .

[16]  Susanna Millar Self-Referent and Movement Cues in Coding Spatial Location by Blind and Sighted Children , 1981, Perception.

[17]  Susanna Millar,et al.  Crossmodal and Intersensory Perception and the Blind , 1981 .

[18]  U. Neisser,et al.  Mental images of concealed objects: new evidence. , 1983, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[19]  A. Paivio Mental Representations: A Dual Coding Approach , 1986 .

[20]  Mark Holllns,et al.  Spatial updating in blind and sighted people , 1988, Perception & psychophysics.

[21]  S. Millar Models of Sensory Deprivation: The Nature/Nurture Dichotomy and Spatial Representation in the Blind , 1988 .

[22]  W. Winn Learning from maps and diagrams , 1991 .

[23]  M. Blades,et al.  Can Visually Impaired Children Use Tactile Maps to Estimate Directions? , 1994 .

[24]  Simon Ungar,et al.  Visually impaired children's strategies for memorising a map , 1995 .

[25]  J. Portugali The construction of cognitive maps , 1996 .