Individual differences in mental rotation: what does gesture tell us?

Gestures are common when people convey spatial information, for example, when they give directions or describe motion in space. Here, we examine the gestures speakers produce when they explain how they solved mental rotation problems (Shepard and Meltzer in Science 171:701–703, 1971). We asked whether speakers gesture differently while describing their problems as a function of their spatial abilities. We found that low-spatial individuals (as assessed by a standard paper-and-pencil measure) gestured more to explain their solutions than high-spatial individuals. While this finding may seem surprising, finer-grained analyses showed that low-spatial participants used gestures more often than high-spatial participants to convey “static only” information but less often than high-spatial participants to convey dynamic information. Furthermore, the groups differed in the types of gestures used to convey static information: high-spatial individuals were more likely than low-spatial individuals to use gestures that captured the internal structure of the block forms. Our gesture findings thus suggest that encoding block structure may be as important as rotating the blocks in mental spatial transformation.

[1]  Mary Hegarty,et al.  The Role of Gestures in Mental Animation , 2005, Spatial Cogn. Comput..

[2]  Moritz M. Daum,et al.  Motor Processes in Children's Mental Rotation , 2009 .

[3]  Brice Isableu,et al.  Embodied spatial transformations: "body analogy" for the mental rotation of objects. , 2006, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[4]  Susan Goldin Hearing gesture : how our hands help us think , 2003 .

[5]  Eric J. Vanetti,et al.  Communicating Environmental Knowledge , 1988 .

[6]  S. Vandenberg,et al.  Mental Rotations, a Group Test of Three-Dimensional Spatial Visualization , 1978, Perceptual and motor skills.

[7]  S. Kita,et al.  The nature of gestures ' beneficial role in spatial problem solving , 2013 .

[8]  L. Cooper Demonstration of a mental analog of an external rotation , 1976 .

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

[10]  Michael Eid,et al.  Separating "Rotators" From "Nonrotators" in the Mental Rotations Test: A Multigroup Latent Class Analysis , 2006, Multivariate behavioral research.

[11]  K. Sekiyama,et al.  Kinesthetic aspects of mental representations in the identification of left and right hands , 1982, Perception & psychophysics.

[12]  S. Kosslyn,et al.  Motor processes in mental rotation , 1998, Cognition.

[13]  Michelle Perry,et al.  Knowledge in transition: Adults' developing understanding of a principle of physical causality , 1997 .

[14]  Martha W. Alibali,et al.  Gesture in Spatial Cognition: Expressing, Communicating, and Thinking About Spatial Information , 2005, Spatial Cogn. Comput..

[15]  Sotaro Kita,et al.  Spontaneous Gestures Influence Strategy Choices in Problem Solving , 2011, Psychological science.

[16]  Stacy B. Ehrlich,et al.  The importance of gesture in children's spatial reasoning. , 2006, Developmental psychology.

[17]  D. Schwartz,et al.  Tool use and the effect of action on the imagination. , 2000, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[18]  R. Shepard,et al.  CHRONOMETRIC STUDIES OF THE ROTATION OF MENTAL IMAGES , 1973 .

[19]  Sian L. Beilock,et al.  Gesture Changes Thought by Grounding It in Action , 2010, Psychological science.

[20]  S. Kosslyn,et al.  Age differences in imagery abilities. , 1990, Child development.

[21]  Wolfgang Lehmann,et al.  Mental Rotation Test Performance in Four Cross-Cultural Samples (N = 3367): Overall Sex Differences and the Role of Academic Program in Performance , 2006, Cortex.

[22]  Susan Goldin-Meadow,et al.  Action’s Influence on Thought: The Case of Gesture , 2010, Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

[23]  D. Kimura,et al.  Hand movement asymmetry during speech: No effect of speaking topic , 1987, Neuropsychologia.

[24]  M. Casey,et al.  The Influence of Spatial Ability on Gender Differences in Mathematics College Entrance Test Scores across Diverse Samples. , 1995 .

[25]  R. Krauss,et al.  PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE Research Article GESTURE, SPEECH, AND LEXICAL ACCESS: The Role of Lexical Movements in Speech Production , 2022 .

[26]  M. Just,et al.  Mental rotation of objects retrieved from memory: a functional MRI study of spatial processing. , 2001, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[27]  Daniel L. Schwartz,et al.  Inferences through imagined actions: Knowing by simulated doing. , 1999 .

[28]  L. Barsalou,et al.  Whither structured representation? , 1999, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[29]  S. Kita,et al.  Spontaneous gestures during mental rotation tasks: insights into the microdevelopment of the motor strategy. , 2008, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[30]  Martha W. Alibali,et al.  Raise your hand if you’re spatial: Relations between verbal and spatial skills and gesture production , 2007 .

[31]  S. Goldin-Meadow,et al.  Learning what children know about space from looking at their hands: the added value of gesture in spatial communication. , 2012, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[32]  Daniel L. Schwartz,et al.  Shuttling Between Depictive Models and Abstract Rules: Induction and Fallback , 1996, Cogn. Sci..

[33]  M. Alibali,et al.  Effects of Visibility between Speaker and Listener on Gesture Production: Some Gestures Are Meant to Be Seen , 2001 .

[34]  Steven J. Luck,et al.  Visual working memory as the substrate for mental rotation , 2007 .

[35]  Susan Goldin-Meadow,et al.  Transitional knowledge in the acquisition of concepts , 1988 .

[36]  S. Goldin-Meadow,et al.  The mismatch between gesture and speech as an index of transitional knowledge , 1986, Cognition.

[37]  R. Shepard,et al.  Mental Images and Their Transformations , 1982 .

[38]  B. Laeng,et al.  A Redrawn Vandenberg and Kuse Mental Rotations Test - Different Versions and Factors That Affect Performance , 1995, Brain and Cognition.

[39]  Margaret Wilson,et al.  Six views of embodied cognition , 2002, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[40]  Susan Goldin-Meadow,et al.  Doing gesture promotes learning a mental transformation task better than seeing gesture. , 2012, Developmental science.

[41]  Joo-Seok Hyun,et al.  Visual working memory as the substrate for mental rotation. , 2010, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[42]  K. Emmorey,et al.  Gesture, Thought, and Spatial Language , 2001 .

[43]  Susan M. Wagner,et al.  Explaining Math: Gesturing Lightens the Load , 2001, Psychological science.

[44]  Sian L. Beilock,et al.  Sports experience changes the neural processing of action language , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[45]  Susan Goldin-Meadow,et al.  Gesturing Saves Cognitive Resources When Talking About Nonpresent Objects , 2010, Cogn. Sci..

[46]  Susan Goldin-Meadow,et al.  Gesture offers insight into problem-solving in adults and children , 2002, Cogn. Sci..

[47]  A. Wohlschläger,et al.  Mental and manual rotation. , 1998, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[48]  D. Collins,et al.  A large sex difference on a two-dimensional mental rotation task. , 1997, Behavioral neuroscience.

[49]  W. Chase,et al.  Visual information processing. , 1974 .

[50]  Martha W. Alibali,et al.  Gesture During Mental Rotation , 2011, CogSci.

[51]  S. Kosslyn,et al.  Training generalized spatial skills , 2008, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[52]  Pierre Feyereisen,et al.  Mental Imagery and Production of Hand Gestures While Speaking in Younger and Older Adults , 1999 .

[53]  Petra Jansen-Osmann,et al.  Suitable stimuli to obtain (no) gender differences in the speed of cognitive processes involved in mental rotation , 2007, Brain and Cognition.