Map recall accuracy depends on navigational strategies
{{brizy_dc_image_alt entityId=

It is now online the article: “Map recall accuracy depends on navigational strategies” by Alessandro von Gal, Paola Verde, and Laura Piccardi, published in Giornale di Medicina
Militare.

This article, written in Italian and English, intends to analyze the contribution of navigational strategies and gender in the delayed recall of a learned path on a map. For this purpose, we first evaluated the different navigational strategies through a battery of specific tests; 51 participants were instructed to study a schematic map of a route in a city map view for 220 seconds. Then, they were divided into three groups based on their navigational strategies: landmark users, route users, and survey users. After 5 minutes, during which they provided anamnestic information, they were asked to recall the learned path and to draw it on a silent map. Correct positions and false recognitions were evaluated. Results showed that the differences in performance were due to the navigational strategy and not to gender. Individuals using the survey strategy, which is more complex and efficient, are more accurate and have fewer false memories than individuals who use a landmark one, the poorest strategy from a navigational point of view. The absence of differences associated with gender corroborates previous findings that emerge from the Aeronautic literature: men and women with the same abilities perform cognitive tasks with the same efficiency.

More from the Blog

{{brizy_dc_image_alt entityId=
Giant chess game enhances spatial navigational skills in 6-years-old children: preliminary findings
It is now online the Article Giant chess game enhances spatial navigational skills in 6-years-old children: preliminary findings by Alessia Bocchi, Massimiliano Palmiero, Filippo Persichetti, Maurizio Matteoli, Cecilia Guariglia and Laura Piccardi publish...
{{brizy_dc_image_alt entityId=
Spatial Navigation and Neurodevelopmental Disorder
Spatial Navigation and Neurodevelopmental Disorder It is now online the Editorial: [Spatial Navigation and Neurodevelopmental Disorders], by   Noemi Faedda, Laura Piccardi, Maddalena Boccia, Åsa Bartonek, Cecilia Guariglia, published in   Frontiers in Psy...
{{brizy_dc_image_alt entityId=
The Contribution of Internal and External Factors to Human Spatial Navigation
The editorial "The Contribution of Internal and External Factors to Human Spatial Navigation" by Laura Piccardi, Raffaella Nori, Jose Manuel Cimadevilla, and Maria Kozhevnikov in Brain Sciences is now available online. Spatial navigation involves various cognitive processes such as memory, attention, spatial updating, mental planning, and problem-solving skills. Additionally, internal and external factors like age, […]
Scroll to Top