Qualitative analyses of critical aspects of adaptation to the visually left-right reversed world

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Abstract

In this article, mechanisms of perceptual adaptation to the transposed world are analyzed based on introspective and behavioral performance data gathered during an extended period of wearing left-right reversing goggles. Three aspects central to this study were the mental map of the living space surrounding the subject, body image (both seen and felt), and the sensorimotor coordination system, which reflects the relationship between the subject and surroundings. These were investigated through map-drawing tests, self-representation tests when postures other than face forward were adopted, and aftereffects observed immediately after removal of the reversing goggles. It was concluded that the main course of the perceptual adaptation to the visually left-right reversed world consists of double reversals of the mental map and body image as well as the establishment of a new sensorimotor coordination system. In sharp contrast to the proprioceptive-change hypothesis, the importance of the visual nature of the body image was emphasized. © 1999 Japanese Psychological Association. Published by Blackwell Publishers Ltd.

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APA

Yoshimura, H. (1999). Qualitative analyses of critical aspects of adaptation to the visually left-right reversed world. Japanese Psychological Research, 41(3), 143–152. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-5884.00113

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