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Learning from where ‘eye’ remotely look or point: impact on number line estimation error in adults.

Authors :
Gallagher-Mitchell, T
Simms, V
Litchfield, Damien
Gallagher-Mitchell, T
Simms, V
Litchfield, Damien
Source :
The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology (2017) date: 2017-05-25 [ISSN 1747-0226]
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

In this paper we present an investigation into the use of visual cues during number line estimation, and their influence on cognitive processes for reducing number line estimation error. Participants completed a 0-1000 number line estimation task pre and post a brief intervention in which they observed staticvisual or dynamic-visual cues (control, anchor, gaze cursor, mouse cursor) and also made estimation marks to test effective number-target estimation. Results indicated that a significant pre-test to post-test reduction in estimation error was present for dynamic visual cues of modelled eye-gaze and mouse-cursor. However, there was no significant performance difference between pre and post-test for the control or static anchor conditions. Findings are discussed in relation to the extent to which anchor points alone are meaningful in promoting successful segmentation of the number line, and whether dynamic cues promote the utility of these locations in reducing error through attentional guidance.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology (2017) date: 2017-05-25 [ISSN 1747-0226]
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1259643307
Document Type :
Electronic Resource