Spatial visualization ability

Not to be confused with Visual thinking.

Spatial visualization ability or visual-spatial ability is the ability to mentally manipulate 2-dimensional, 3-dimensional and 4-dimensional figures. It is typically measured with simple cognitive tests and is predictive of user performance with some kinds of user interfaces.

Measurement

The cognitive tests used to measure spatial visualization ability include mental rotation tasks like the Mental Rotations Test and cognitive tests like the VZ-1 (Form Board), VZ-2 (Paper Folding), and VZ-3 (Surface Development) tests from the Kit of Factor-Reference cognitive tests produced by Educational Testing Service. Though the descriptions of spatial visualization and mental rotation sound similar, mental rotation is a particular task that can be accomplished using spatial visualization.[1]

The Form Board test involves giving participants a shape and a set of smaller shapes which they are then instructed to determine which combination of small shapes will fill the larger shape completely without overlapping. The Paper Folding test involves showing participants a sequence of folds in a piece of paper, through which a set of holes is then punched. The participants must choose which of a set of unfolded papers with holes corresponds to the one they have just seen.

The Surface Development test involves giving participants a flat shape with numbered sides and a three-dimensional shape with lettered sides and asking the participants to indicate which numbered side corresponds to which lettered side.

Gender differences

According to certain studies, men on average have one standard deviation higher spatial intelligence quotient than women.[2] This domain is one of the few where clear sex differences in cognition appear. However, in a couple of studies, once time constraints were removed, women did as well as men. It has also been found that spatial ability correlates with verbal ability in women but not in men, suggesting that women may use different strategies for spatial visualization tasks than men do. Researchers at the University of Toronto state they have shown that differences between men and women on some tasks that require spatial skills are largely eliminated after both groups play a video game for only a few hours.[3] Although some have claimed women are more "visually dependent" than men,[4] this has recently been disputed.[5] Other studies suggest gender differences in spatial thinking may be explained by a stereotype threat effect. The fear of fulfilling stereotypes negatively affects the performance which results in a self-fulfilling prophecy.[6] The adaptive significance, if any, of male superiority in spatial navigation, has recently been questioned.[7]

Age differences

Older adults tend to perform worse on measures of spatial visualization ability than younger adults, and this effect seems to occur even among people who use spatial visualization frequently on the job, such as architects (though architects still perform better on the measures than non-architects of the same age). It is, however, possible that the types of spatial visualization used by architects are not measured accurately by the tests.

History

Spatial visualization ability itself is not new. The construct of spatial visualization ability was first identified as a separate thing from general intelligence in the 20th Century, and its implications for computer system design were identified in the 1980s.

In 1987, Kim Vicente and colleagues ran a battery of cognitive tests on a set of participants and then determined which cognitive abilities correlated with performance on a computerized information search task. They found that the only significant predictors of performance were vocabulary and spatial visualization ability, and that those with high spatial visualization ability were twice as fast to perform the task as those with lower levels of spatial visualization ability.[8]

See also

References

Inline citations

  1. Mitchell, J.; Kent, L. (2003). "Mental rotation: What is it?". International Journal of Human-Computer Studies. 49 (1): 5978. doi:10.1006/ijhc.1998.0200.
  2. Robert & Chevrier (2003).
  3. "Playing Video Games Reduces Sex Differences In Spatial Skills". ScienceDaily. 26 October 2007. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
  4. Witkin, H. A.; Lewis, H. B.; Hertzman, M.; Machover, K.; Meissner, P. B.; Wapner, S. (1954). Personality through perception: An experimental and clinical study. Harper and Brother. LCCN 53010927.
  5. Barnett-Cowan, M.; Dyde, R. T.; Thompson, C.; Harris, L. R. (2010). "Multisensory determinants of orientation perception: Task-specific sex differences". European Journal of Neuroscience. 31 (10): 1899–907. doi:10.1111/j.1460-9568.2010.07199.x. PMID 20584195.
  6. McGlone, Matthew S, Aronson, Joshua (2006). "Stereotype threat, identity salience, and spatial reasoning". Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology. Elsevier. 27 (5): 486–493. doi:10.1016/j.appdev.2006.06.003.
  7. Clint, E.; Sober, E.; Garland, T Jr.; Rhodes, J. S. (2013). "Male superiority in spatial navigation: Adaptation or side-effect?". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 87 (1): 289313. doi:10.1086/668168.
  8. Vicente, K. J.; Hayes, B. C.; Williges, R. C. (1987). "Assaying and isolating individual differences in searching a hierarchical file system". Human Factors. 29 (3): 349359. PMID 3623569.

General references

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.