When mentally exploring maps representing large-scale environments (e.g., countries or continents), humans are assumed to mainly rely on spatial information derived from direct perceptual experience (e.g., prior visual experience with the geographical map itself). In the present study, we rather tested whether also temporal and linguistic information could account for the way humans explore and ultimately represent this type of maps. We quantified temporal distance as the minimum time needed to travel by train across Italian cities, while linguistic distance was retrieved from natural language through cognitively plausible AI models based on non-spatial associative learning mechanisms (i.e., distributional semantic models). In a first experiment, we show that temporal and linguistic distances capture with high-confidence real geographical distances. Next, in a second behavioral experiment, we show that linguistic information can account for human performance over and above real spatial information (which plays the major role in explaining participants’ performance) in a task in which participants have to judge the distance between cities (while temporal information was found to be not relevant). These findings indicate that, when exploring maps representing large-scale environments, humans do take advantage of both perceptual and linguistic information, suggesting in turn that the formation of cognitive maps possibly relies on a strict interplay between spatial and non-spatial learning principles.

Gatti, D., Anceresi, G., Marelli, M., Vecchi, T., Rinaldi, L. (2024). Decomposing geographical judgments into spatial, temporal and linguistic components. PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 88(5), 1590-1601 [10.1007/s00426-024-01980-7].

Decomposing geographical judgments into spatial, temporal and linguistic components

Marelli M.;Rinaldi L.
2024

Abstract

When mentally exploring maps representing large-scale environments (e.g., countries or continents), humans are assumed to mainly rely on spatial information derived from direct perceptual experience (e.g., prior visual experience with the geographical map itself). In the present study, we rather tested whether also temporal and linguistic information could account for the way humans explore and ultimately represent this type of maps. We quantified temporal distance as the minimum time needed to travel by train across Italian cities, while linguistic distance was retrieved from natural language through cognitively plausible AI models based on non-spatial associative learning mechanisms (i.e., distributional semantic models). In a first experiment, we show that temporal and linguistic distances capture with high-confidence real geographical distances. Next, in a second behavioral experiment, we show that linguistic information can account for human performance over and above real spatial information (which plays the major role in explaining participants’ performance) in a task in which participants have to judge the distance between cities (while temporal information was found to be not relevant). These findings indicate that, when exploring maps representing large-scale environments, humans do take advantage of both perceptual and linguistic information, suggesting in turn that the formation of cognitive maps possibly relies on a strict interplay between spatial and non-spatial learning principles.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
grounded cognition; language; distributional semantics; spatial representations
English
5-giu-2024
2024
88
5
1590
1601
none
Gatti, D., Anceresi, G., Marelli, M., Vecchi, T., Rinaldi, L. (2024). Decomposing geographical judgments into spatial, temporal and linguistic components. PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 88(5), 1590-1601 [10.1007/s00426-024-01980-7].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/512039
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