Learning from Cartograms: The Effects of Region Familiarity

Abstract Value-by-area maps, or cartograms, are a curiosity-provoking method of depicting geographically related data. The use of cartograms for learning such data involves a learner's familiarity with the region depicted and the distortion of true, earth-centered scale. To examine the effects of region familiarity and region distortion on learning from cartograms, college undergraduates viewed a true-scale map of either a familiar or an unfamiliar region followed by either a cartogram or a data map of the same region. They then drew the true-scale map from memory, and matched map data-levels on a cued-recall map. Long-term familiarity was observed as an important prerequisite for successful use of cartograms. Cartogram depiction of unfamiliar regions resulted in inaccurate reconstructions and degraded levels of data recall. The results were interpreted with respect to cognitive theoretical assumptions. Suggestions were made regarding the instructional use of cartograms.

[1]  Jeffrey S. Torguson,et al.  Cartography: Thematic Map Design , 1990 .

[2]  D. Levine,et al.  Two visual systems in mental imagery , 1985, Neurology.

[3]  Raymond W. Kulhavy,et al.  Properties of Maps that Improve Recall of Associated Text , 1993 .

[4]  G. A. Miller THE PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW THE MAGICAL NUMBER SEVEN, PLUS OR MINUS TWO: SOME LIMITS ON OUR CAPACITY FOR PROCESSING INFORMATION 1 , 1956 .

[5]  S. J. Segal,et al.  Influence of imaged pictures and sounds on detection of visual and auditory signals. , 1970, Journal of experimental psychology.

[6]  Edward R. Tufte,et al.  The Visual Display of Quantitative Information , 1986 .

[7]  Herbert A. Simon,et al.  Why a Diagram is (Sometimes) Worth Ten Thousand Words , 1987 .

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

[9]  K. Rittschof,et al.  Thematic Maps and Text / An Analysis of "What Happened There? , 1993 .

[10]  K. Rittschof,et al.  Thematic Maps Improve Memory for Facts and Inferences: A Test of the Stimulus Order Hypothesis , 1994 .

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

[12]  Leslie G. Ungerleider Two cortical visual systems , 1982 .

[13]  Raymond W. Kulhavy,et al.  How geographic maps increase recall of instructional text , 1993 .

[14]  A Reeves,et al.  Visual Imagery Selectively Reduces Vernier Acuity , 1987, Perception.

[15]  Mark Blades,et al.  The reliability of data collected from sketch maps , 1990 .

[16]  D. Levine,et al.  Visual and spatial mental imagery: Dissociable systems of representation , 1988, Cognitive Psychology.

[17]  Robert M. Gagné,et al.  The Conditions of Learning and Theory of Instruction , 1985 .

[18]  Wilhelmina C. Savenye,et al.  Why maps improve memory for text: The influence of structural information on working memory operations , 1993 .

[19]  E. Raisz The Rectangular Statistical Cartogram , 1934 .

[20]  Wesley A. Mah,et al.  Cognitive reference points in judgments of symbolic magnitude , 1982, Cognitive Psychology.

[21]  Cheves West Perky An Experimental study of imagination. , 1910 .

[22]  Borden D. Dent,et al.  A Note on the Importance of Shape in Cartogram Communication , 1972 .

[23]  J. A. McGeoch Forgetting and the law of disuse. , 1932 .

[24]  Judy M. Olson,et al.  NONCONTIGUOUS AREA CARTOGRAMS , 1976 .

[25]  Judith A. Tyner Introduction to Thematic Cartography , 1992 .

[26]  Borden D. Dent,et al.  Communication Aspects of Value-by-Area Cartograms , 1975 .