Comparison of the haptic and visual deviations in a parallelity task

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Abstract

Deviations in both haptic and visual spatial experiments are thought to be caused by a biasing influence of an egocentric reference frame. The strength of this influence is strongly participant-dependent. By using a parallelity test, it is studied whether this strength is modality-independent. In both haptic and visual conditions, large, systematic and participant-dependent deviations were found. However, although the correlation between the haptic and visual deviations was significant, the explained variance due to a common factor was only 20%. Therefore, the degree to which a participant is "egocentric" depends on modality and possibly even more generally, on experimental condition. © 2010 The Author(s).

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Kappers, A. M. L., & Schakel, W. B. (2011). Comparison of the haptic and visual deviations in a parallelity task. Experimental Brain Research, 208(3), 467–473. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-010-2500-3

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