Memory processing of spatial order as transmitted by auditory information in the absence of visual cues

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Abstract

Two experiments were conducted concerning spatial order recall when spatial information is transmitted by auditory stimuli. Temporal order either was congruent with spatial order or was independent of spatial order. In Experiment 1, the comparisons were among normally or partially sighted subjects allowed to look, normally sighted subjects who were blindfolded, and blind children. The main findings were a superiority of the sighted subjects allowed to look (that is, to support auditory information with visual cues) and a smaller advantage for the sighted-but-blindfolded subjects, relative to the blind group. In Experiment 2, normally sighted adults (either seeing or blindfolded) and blind adults were tested. Surprisingly, the blind were not worse than the sighted in this study. Subsequent interviews and detailed analysis of errors suggested that the blind coded spatial information kinesthetically. These indirect analyses also suggested that whereas spatial order was coded temporally in the sighted, it was controlled by both temporal and spatial factors in the blind and blindfolded subjects. © 1981 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Battacchi, M. W., Franza, A., & Pani, R. (1981). Memory processing of spatial order as transmitted by auditory information in the absence of visual cues. Memory & Cognition, 9(3), 301–307. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03196963

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