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Spatial Cognition & Computation
An Interdisciplinary Journal
Volume 19, 2019 - Issue 2
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Articles

Which way is the bookstore? A closer look at the judgments of relative directions task

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Armand Kapaj, Sara Lanini-Maggi, Christopher Hilton, Bingjie Cheng & Sara I. Fabrikant. (2023) How does the design of landmarks on a mobile map influence wayfinding experts’ spatial learning during a real-world navigation task?. Cartography and Geographic Information Science 50:2, pages 197-213.
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Articles from other publishers (16)

Christopher Hilton & Jan Wiener. (2023) Route sequence knowledge supports the formation of cognitive maps. Hippocampus 33:11, pages 1161-1170.
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Darin Galyer & Stephen Dopkins. (2023) Direction and distance information in memory for location relative to landmarks. Acta Psychologica 240, pages 104040.
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Michael J. Starrett, Derek J. Huffman & Arne D. Ekstrom. (2022) Combining egoformative and alloformative cues in a novel tabletop navigation task. Psychological Research 87:5, pages 1644-1664.
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Yu Zhao, Jeanine Stefanucci, Sarah Creem-Regehr & Bobby Bodenheimer. (2023) Evaluating Augmented Reality Landmark Cues and Frame of Reference Displays with Virtual Reality. IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics 29:5, pages 2710-2720.
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Carina L. Fan, H. Moriah Sokolowski, R. Shayna Rosenbaum & Brian Levine. (2023) What about “space” is important for episodic memory?. WIREs Cognitive Science 14:3.
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Bingjie Cheng, Enru Lin, Anna Wunderlich, Klaus Gramann & Sara I. Fabrikant. (2023) Using spontaneous eye blink-related brain activity to investigate cognitive load during mobile map-assisted navigation. Frontiers in Neuroscience 17.
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Yu K. Du, Andrew S. McAvan, Jingyi Zheng & Arne D. Ekstrom. (2023) Spatial memory distortions for the shapes of walked paths occur in violation of physically experienced geometry. PLOS ONE 18:2, pages e0281739.
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Bingjie Cheng, Anna Wunderlich, Klaus Gramann, Enru Lin & Sara I. Fabrikant. (2022) The effect of landmark visualization in mobile maps on brain activity during navigation: A virtual reality study. Frontiers in Virtual Reality 3.
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Chuanxiuyue He, Elizabeth R. Chrastil & Mary Hegarty. (2022) A new psychometric task measuring spatial perspective taking in ambulatory virtual reality. Frontiers in Virtual Reality 3.
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Kevin Biju, Eric X. Wei, Elliott Rebello, Jacob Matthews, Qiliang He, Timothy P. McNamara & Yuri Agrawal. (2021) Performance in Real World- and Virtual Reality-Based Spatial Navigation Tasks in Patients With Vestibular Dysfunction. Otology & Neurotology 42:10, pages e1524-e1531.
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Michael J. Starrett, Andrew S. McAvan, Derek J. Huffman, Jared D. Stokes, Colin T. Kyle, Dana N. Smuda, Branden S. Kolarik, Jason Laczko & Arne D. Ekstrom. (2020) Landmarks: A solution for spatial navigation and memory experiments in virtual reality. Behavior Research Methods 53:3, pages 1046-1059.
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Phillip M. Newman, Gregory E. Cox & Timothy P. McNamara. (2021) A computational cognitive model of judgments of relative direction. Cognition 209, pages 104559.
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Derek J. Huffman & Arne D. Ekstrom. (2021) An Important Step toward Understanding the Role of Body-based Cues on Human Spatial Memory for Large-Scale Environments. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 33:2, pages 167-179.
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Adam Steel, Caroline E. Robertson & Jeffrey S. Taube. (2021) Current Promises and Limitations of Combined Virtual Reality and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Research in Humans: A Commentary on Huffman and Ekstrom (). Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 33:2, pages 159-166.
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Arne D. Ekstrom, Sevan K. Harootonian & Derek J. Huffman. (2019) Grid coding, spatial representation, and navigation: Should we assume an isomorphism?. Hippocampus 30:4, pages 422-432.
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Derek J. Huffman & Arne D. Ekstrom. (2019) A Modality-Independent Network Underlies the Retrieval of Large-Scale Spatial Environments in the Human Brain. Neuron 104:3, pages 611-622.e7.
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