Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Landmark Sequence Learning from Real-World Route Navigation and the Impact of Navigation Aid Visualisation Style Cover

Landmark Sequence Learning from Real-World Route Navigation and the Impact of Navigation Aid Visualisation Style

Open Access
|Jul 2023

Abstract

Primacy and recency features of serial memory are a hallmark of typical memory functions that have been observed for a wide array of tasks. Recently, the ubiquity of this serial position effect has been supported for objects learned during navigation, with canonical serial position functions observed for sequence memory of landmarks that were encountered along a route during a highly controlled virtual navigation task. In the present study, we extended those findings to a real-world navigation task in which participants actively walked a route through a city whilst using a navigation aid featuring either realistic or abstract landmark visualisation styles. Analyses of serial position functions (i.e., absolute sequence knowledge) and sequence lags (i.e., relative sequence knowledge) yielded similar profiles to those observed in a lab based virtual navigation task from previous work and non-spatial list learning studies. There were strong primacy effects for serial position memory in both conditions; recency effects only in the realistic visualisation condition; a non-uniform distribution of item-lags peaking at lag +1; and an overall bias towards positive lags for both visualisation conditions. The findings demonstrate that benchmark serial position memory effects can be observed in uncontrolled, real-world behaviour. In a navigation context, the results support the notion that general memory mechanisms are involved in spatial learning, and that landmark sequence knowledge is a feature of spatial knowledge which is affected by navigation aids.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/joc.307 | Journal eISSN: 2514-4820
Language: English
Submitted on: Feb 15, 2023
Accepted on: Jun 25, 2023
Published on: Jul 12, 2023
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2023 Christopher Hilton, Armand Kapaj, Sara I. Fabrikant, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.