Space and Sense

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A01=Susanna Millar
Author_Susanna Millar
Bisection Bias
Blind Children
body
Braille Characters
Braille Readers
Category=JMR
Category=PSAN
coding
Convergent Shapes
cues
Early Blind
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
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External Reference Cues
External Reference Information
Hand Movement
haptic
Haptic Conditions
Haptic Illusion
haptic perception
hypothesis
Inverted T-shapes
Large Scale Space
Left Hand Advantage
Length Judgements
Movement Time
multisensory integration
perception
perceptual illusions
Posture Cues
reference
Reference Cues
Reference Hypothesis
Reference Information
sensory reference cues
spatial
Spatial Coding
spatial cognition
spatial processing in touch and vision
tabletop
Tabletop Space
tactile spatial memory
Tactual Illusion
task
Vertical Horizontal Illusion

Product details

  • ISBN 9781841695259
  • Weight: 502g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Apr 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How do we perceive the space around us, locate objects within it, and make our way through it? What do the senses contribute?

This book focuses on touch in order to examine which aspects of vision and touch overlap in spatial processing. It argues that spatial processing depends crucially on integrating diverse sensory inputs as reference cues for the location, distance or direction response that spatial tasks demand. Space and Sense shows how perception by touch, as by vision, can be helped by external reference cues, and that ‘visual’ illusions that are also found in touch depend on common factors and do not occur by chance.

Susanna Millar presents new evidence on the role of spatial cues in touch and movement both with and without vision, and discusses the interaction of both touch and movement with vision in spatial tasks. The book shows how perception by touch, as by vision, can be helped by external reference cues, and that ‘visual’ illusions that are also found in touch depend on common factors and do not occur by chance. It challenges traditional views of explicit external reference cues, showing that they can improve spatial recall with inputs from touch and movement, contrary to the held belief.

Space and Sense provides empirical evidence for an important distinction between spatial vision and vision that excludes spatial cues in relation to touch. This important new volume extends previous descriptions of bimodal effects in vision and space.

Susanna Millar is a Senior Research Scientist at the Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford.

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