Allocentric Spatial Performance Higher in Early-Blind and Sighted Adults Than in Retinopathy-of-Prematurity Adults

Author:

Eardley Alison F.1,Edwards Geoffrey23,Malouin Francine3,Kennedy John M.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of Westminster, London, UK

2. Centre de Recherche en Géomatique, Université Laval, Quèbec, Canada

3. Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Rehabilitation & Social Integration (CIRRIS), Laval University, Quèbec, Canada

4. Department of Psychology, University of Toronto at Scarborough, ON, Canada

Abstract

The question as to whether people totally blind since infancy process allocentric or external spatial information like the sighted has caused considerable debate within the literature. Due to the extreme rarity of the population, researchers have often included individuals with retinopathy of prematurity (RoP—over oxygenation at birth) within the sample. However, RoP is inextricably confounded with prematurity per se. Prematurity, without visual disability, has been associated with spatial processing difficulties. In this experiment, blindfolded sighted participants and two groups of functionally totally blind participants heard text descriptions from a survey (allocentric) or route (egocentric) perspective. One blind group lost their sight due to RoP and a second group before 24 months of age. The accuracy of participants’ mental representations derived from the text descriptions was assessed via questions and maps. The RoP participants had lower scores than the sighted and early blind, who performed similarly. In other words, it was not visual impairment alone that resulted in impaired allocentric spatial performance in this task but visual impairment together with RoP. This finding may help explain the contradictions within the existing literature on the role of vision in allocentric spatial processing.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Ophthalmology

Reference54 articles.

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2. Functional Equivalence of Spatial Representations Derived From Vision and Language: Evidence From Allocentric Judgments.

3. The Effect of Spatial Tasks on Visually Impaired Peoples’ Wayfinding Abilities

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5. Centred Egocentric, Decentred Egocentric, and Allocentric Spatial Representations in the Peripersonal Space of Congenital Total Blindness

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