Besides navigation accuracy: Gender differences in strategy selection and level of spatial confidence
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] J. M. Dabbs,et al. Spatial Ability, Navigation Strategy, and Geographic Knowledge Among Men and Women , 1998 .
[2] L Girelli,et al. Gender differences in visuo-spatial processing: the importance of distinguishing between passive storage and active manipulation. , 1998, Acta psychologica.
[3] L. K. Miller,et al. Sex differences in spatial abilities: strategic and experiential correlates. , 1986, Acta psychologica.
[4] K J Bryant. Geographical/Spatial Orientation Ability Within Real-World and Simulated Large-Scale Environments. , 1991, Multivariate behavioral research.
[5] Jonathan W. Kelly,et al. Individual differences in using geometric and featural cues to maintain spatial orientation: Cue quantity and cue ambiguity are more important than cue type , 2009, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[6] K. I. Gabriel,et al. Sex differences in cue perception in a visual scene: investigation of cue type. , 2007, Behavioral neuroscience.
[7] J. Parsons,et al. Socialization of Achievement Attitudes and Beliefs: Parental Influences. , 1982 .
[8] Debbie M Kelly,et al. Reorienting in images of a three-dimensional environment. , 2005, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.
[9] Sigrid Schmitz,et al. GENDER-RELATED STRATEGIES IN ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENT: EFFECTS OF ANXIETY ON WAYFINDING IN AND REPRESENTATION OF A THREE-DIMENSIONAL MAZE , 1997 .
[10] N. Cole,et al. Gender and fair assessment , 1997 .
[11] S. D. Lonborg,et al. Gender Differences in the Effects of Acute Stress on Spatial Ability , 2011 .
[12] P. Shih,et al. Solution strategies as possible explanations of individual and sex differences in a dynamic spatial task. , 2008, Acta psychologica.
[13] Nora S Newcombe,et al. Reorienting When Cues Conflict , 2008, Psychological science.
[14] Christian F. Doeller,et al. Parallel striatal and hippocampal systems for landmarks and boundaries in spatial memory , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[15] Alessandro O. Caffò,et al. Assessing human reorientation ability inside virtual reality environments: the effects of retention interval and landmark characteristics , 2008, Cognitive Processing.
[16] D. McNamara,et al. Working memory capacity and strategy use , 2001, Memory & cognition.
[17] Daniel Voyer,et al. Confidence and Gender Differences on the Mental Rotations Test. , 2007 .
[18] Lucia F Jacobs,et al. Unpacking the cognitive map: the parallel map theory of hippocampal function. , 2003, Psychological review.
[19] C. Lawton. Gender differences in way-finding strategies: Relationship to spatial ability and spatial anxiety , 1994 .
[20] Francesca Pazzaglia,et al. Beyond Genetics in Mental Rotation Test Performance: The Power of Effort Attribution. , 2010 .
[21] Construction of a spatial mental model from a verbal description or from navigation in a virtual environment , 2006, Cognitive Processing.
[22] D. Saucier,et al. Sex differences in object location memory and spatial navigation in Long-Evans rats , 2007, Animal Cognition.
[23] E. Coluccia,et al. Gender differences in spatial orientation: A review , 2004 .
[24] S. P. Shohov. Perspectives on cognitive psychology , 2002 .
[25] Valeria Anna Sovrano,et al. Modularity as a fish (Xenotoca eiseni) views it: conjoining geometric and nongeometric information for spatial reorientation. , 2003, Journal of experimental psychology. Animal behavior processes.
[26] S. Shettleworth,et al. Learning about Environmental Geometry: an Associative Model , 2022 .
[27] R. Sutherland,et al. A characterization of performance by men and women in a virtual Morris water task: A large and reliable sex difference , 1998, Behavioural Brain Research.
[28] Lorin J. Elias,et al. Are sex differences in navigation caused by sexually dimorphic strategies or by differences in the ability to use the strategies , 2002 .
[29] Luciana Picucci,et al. A new methodology to assess individual differences in spatial memory: The computer generated version of the Reorientation Paradigm , 2010 .
[30] Irwin Silverman,et al. The Hunter-Gatherer Theory of Sex Differences in Spatial Abilities: Data from 40 Countries , 2007, Archives of sexual behavior.
[31] Augusto Gnisci,et al. Gender differences in object location memory in a real three-dimensional environment , 2005, Brain and Cognition.
[32] C. Gallistel,et al. Representations in animal cognition: An introduction , 1990, Cognition.
[33] N. Newcombe,et al. Turn Left at the Church, Or Three Miles North , 1986 .
[34] C. Lawton,et al. Gender Differences in Wayfinding Strategies and Anxiety About Wayfinding: A Cross-Cultural Comparison , 2002 .
[35] Andrea Bosco,et al. “Two cues are not better than one” the integration of geometric and featural information in the reorientation paradigm , 2006, Cognitive Processing.
[36] K. Cheng. A purely geometric module in the rat's spatial representation , 1986, Cognition.
[37] A. Bosco,et al. Age and sex differences in a virtual version of the reorientation task , 2009, Cognitive Processing.
[38] J. Hyde,et al. The Gender Similarities Hypothesis , 2005 .
[39] Andrea Bosco,et al. Gender effects in spatial orientation: cognitive profiles and mental strategies , 2004, Applied cognitive psychology.
[40] S. Moffat,et al. Navigation in a “Virtual” Maze: Sex Differences and Correlation With Psychometric Measures of Spatial Ability in Humans , 1998 .
[41] P. Shih,et al. Performance as a Function of Ability, Resources Invested, and Strategy Used , 2009, The Journal of general psychology.
[42] L. Cosmides,et al. The Adapted mind : evolutionary psychology and the generation of culture , 1992 .
[43] R. Astur,et al. Sex differences and correlations in a virtual Morris water task, a virtual radial arm maze, and mental rotation , 2004, Behavioural Brain Research.
[44] Johan Wagemans,et al. Sex differences in human virtual water maze performance: Novel measures reveal the relative contribution of directional responding and spatial knowledge , 2010, Behavioural Brain Research.
[45] C. Lawton. STRATEGIES FOR INDOOR WAYFINDING: THE ROLE OF ORIENTATION , 1996 .
[46] Xiaoqian J. Chai,et al. Effects of cue types on sex differences in human spatial memory , 2010, Behavioural Brain Research.
[47] Giuliano Carlo Geminiani,et al. Spatial navigation in large-scale virtual environments: Gender differences in survey tasks , 2008, Comput. Hum. Behav..
[48] Barbara Landau,et al. Spatial representation across species: geometry, language, and maps , 2009, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.
[49] Maarten H. Lamers,et al. Landmarks and Time-Pressure in Virtual Navigation: Towards Designing Gender-Neutral Virtual Environments , 2009, FaVE.
[50] L. Kozlowski,et al. Sense of Direction, Spatial Orientation, and Cognitive Maps. , 1977 .
[51] J. Pratt,et al. Playing an Action Video Game Reduces Gender Differences in Spatial Cognition , 2007, Psychological science.
[52] Toni Schmader,et al. Gender Identification Moderates Stereotype Threat Effects on Women's Math Performance ☆ ☆☆ ★ , 2002 .
[53] Walter F. Bischof,et al. Orienting in virtual environments: How are surface features and environmental geometry weighted in an orientation task? , 2008, Cognition.
[54] Lucia F. Jacobs,et al. Sex and species differences in spatial memory in food-storing kangaroo rats , 2007, Animal Behaviour.
[55] Sylvia Fitting,et al. Spatial Strategy Selection: Interesting Incremental Information , 2003 .
[56] Sylvia Beyer,et al. Gender Differences in Seff-Perceptions: Convergent Evidence from Three Measures of Accuracy and Bias , 1997 .
[57] Mary Hegarty,et al. What determines our navigational abilities? , 2010, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[58] A. Maass,et al. Stereotype threat: When minority members underperform , 2003 .
[59] S. Huettel,et al. Males and females use different distal cues in a virtual environment navigation task. , 1998, Brain research. Cognitive brain research.
[60] B. Chilisa. Towards Equity in Assessment: Crafting gender-fair assessment , 2000 .
[61] Anthony E. Richardson,et al. Spatial knowledge acquisition from maps and from navigation in real and virtual environments , 1999, Memory & cognition.
[62] Geoffrey R. Loftus,et al. Accounts of the confidence-accuracy relation in recognition memory , 2000, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[63] Brad Brubaker,et al. Use of landmarks in cognitive mapping: Gender differences in self report versus performance , 1998 .
[64] Andrea Bosco,et al. The role of visuo-spatial working memory in map learning: new findings from a map drawing paradigm , 2007, Psychological research.
[65] Demis Basso,et al. Gender differences in visuospatial planning: An eye movements study , 2010, Behavioural Brain Research.
[66] Daniel Voyer,et al. Gender differences in object location memory: A meta-analysis , 2007, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[67] Carl P. T. Jackson,et al. Sex differences in a virtual water maze: An eye tracking and pupillometry study , 2008, Behavioural Brain Research.
[68] Victoria D. Chamizo,et al. Effects of Absolute Proximity Between Landmark and Platform in a Virtual Morris Pool Task with Humans , 2005 .
[69] T. Iachini,et al. Gender differences in remembering and inferring spatial distances , 2008, Memory.
[70] R. Morris,et al. Place navigation impaired in rats with hippocampal lesions , 1982, Nature.
[71] N. Newcombe,et al. Is there a geometric module for spatial orientation? squaring theory and evidence , 2005, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[72] Nancy E. Betz,et al. A self-efficacy approach to the career development of women , 1981 .
[73] Pierre Lavenex,et al. Spatial relational learning and memory abilities do not differ between men and women in a real-world, open-field environment , 2010, Behavioural Brain Research.
[74] C. Lawton,et al. Individual- and Gender-Related Differences in Indoor Wayfinding , 1996 .
[75] Jessica A. Church,et al. Stereotype susceptibility narrows the gender gap in imagined self-rotation performance , 2006, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[76] I. Cherney. Mom, Let Me Play More Computer Games: They Improve My Mental Rotation Skills , 2008 .
[77] E. Spelke,et al. Modularity and development: the case of spatial reorientation , 1996, Cognition.
[78] Sapna Cheryan,et al. When Positive Stereotypes Threaten Intellectual Performance: The Psychological Hazards of “Model Minority” Status , 2000, Psychological science.
[79] Nora S Newcombe,et al. Why size counts: children's spatial reorientation in large and small enclosures. , 2008, Developmental science.
[80] Elizabeth S. Spelke,et al. A geometric process for spatial reorientation in young children , 1994, Nature.
[81] Ronald R. Schmeck,et al. Individual differences in cognition , 1983 .
[82] V. D. Chamizo,et al. Single landmark learning in rats: Sex differences in a navigation task , 2009 .
[83] Kevin G. F. Thomas,et al. Place Learning in Virtual Space I: Acquisition, Overshadowing, and Transfer , 1997 .
[84] Irwin Silverman,et al. Sex differences in spatial abilities: Evolutionary theory and data. , 1992 .
[85] Daniel L. Schacter,et al. Understanding metamemory: Neural correlates of the cognitive process and subjective level of confidence in recognition memory , 2006, NeuroImage.
[86] M. Sholl,et al. The relation of sex and sense of direction to spatial orientation in an unfamiliar environment , 2000 .
[87] Francesca Pazzaglia,et al. Following the instructions!: Effects of gender beliefs in mental rotation , 2006 .