Walking on a minefield: planning, remembering, and avoiding obstacles: preliminary findings
{{brizy_dc_image_alt entityId=


It is now online the Article “
Walking on a minefield: planning, remembering, and avoiding obstacles: preliminary findings” by Alessia Bocchi, Massimiliano Palmiero and Laura Piccardi, published in Experimental Brain Research. The article is focused on travel planning, a skill crucial to reach a destination and/or to select the best route according to the environmental features. Considering that travel planning involves several cognitive processes (i.e. visuo-spatial working memory (VSWM); topographic working memory and general planning) we investigated the weight of these processes. Specifically, we used the Minefield Task (Bocchi et al 2020) a tool developed in our laboratory a few years ago. The results show that the underlying processes in travel planning appear to be VSWM and general planning, so young people with better VSWM and planning skills also score higher in travel planning.

More from the Blog

{{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=
Disruptive resting state networks characterizing depressive comorbidity in Alzheimer’s disease and mild cognitive impairment
It is now online ALE-meta-analysis: Disruptive resting state networks characterizing depressive comorbidity in Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment by Alessandro von Gal, Dario Papa, Marco D’Auria, and Laura Piccardi, published in Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease. This systematic literature review on Scopus, PubMed, and Web of Science extracts experiments that compare resting state scans of […]
{{brizy_dc_image_alt entityId=
How Reasoning Style Influences the Attribution of Intentionality
How Reasoning Style Influences the Attribution of Intentionality A recent article published in Cognitive Processing by researchers Nicola Matteucci Armandi Avogli Trotti, Micaela Maria Zucchelli, Andrea Pavan, Laura Piccardi, and Raffaella Nori explores the deep connection between our reasoning style and how we attribute intentionality to others, especially in morally ambiguous situations. Link to the official article: […]
Scroll to Top