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Wayfinding Behavior: Cognitive Mapping and Other Spatial Processes

Wayfinding Behavior: Cognitive Mapping and Other Spatial Processes

Hardcover

BiologyGeneral Psychology

ISBN10: 080185993X
ISBN13: 9780801859939
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Published: Jan 14 1999
Pages: 448
Weight: 1.85
Height: 1.50 Width: 6.20 Depth: 9.10
Language: English

The metaphor of a cognitive maphas attracted wide interest since it was first proposed in the late 1940s. Researchers from fields as diverse as psychology, geography, and urban planning have explored how humans process and use spatial information, often with the view of explaining why people make wayfinding errors or what makes one person a better navigator than another. Cognitive psychologists have broken navigation down into its component steps and shown it to be an interplay of neurocognitive functions, such as spatial updatingand reference framesor perception-action couplings.But there has also been an intense debate among biologists over whether animals have cognitive maps or have other forms of internal spatial representations that allow them to behave as if they did. Yet until now, little has been done to relate research on human and non-human subjects in this area.

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General Psychology