Reasoning About Geography
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To understand the nature and etiology of biases in geographical judgments, the authors asked people to estimate latitudes (Experiments 1 and 2) and longitudes (Experiments 3 and 4) of cities throughout the Old and New Worlds. They also examined how people's biased geographical judgments change after they receive accurate information ("seeds") about actual locations. Location profiles constructed from the pre- and postseeding location estimates conveyed detailed information about the representations underlying geography knowledge, including the subjective positioning and subregionalization of regions within continents; differential seeding effects revealed between-region dependencies. The findings implicate an important role for conceptual knowledge and plausible-reasoning processes in tasks that use subjective geographical information.
Real-world estimation taps into basic numeric abilities.
Kreis B, Gross J, Pachur T Psychon Bull Rev. 2024; .
PMID: 39467930 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-024-02575-4.
Decomposing geographical judgments into spatial, temporal and linguistic components.
Gatti D, Anceresi G, Marelli M, Vecchi T, Rinaldi L Psychol Res. 2024; 88(5):1590-1601.
PMID: 38836875 PMC: 11282145. DOI: 10.1007/s00426-024-01980-7.
Transport makes cities: transit maps as major cognitive frames of metropolitan areas.
Prabhakar A, Grison E, Lhuillier S, Leprevost F, Gyselinck V, Morgagni S Psychol Res. 2024; 88(3):1060-1080.
PMID: 38305865 DOI: 10.1007/s00426-023-01925-6.
No evidence for chunking in spatial memory of route experience.
Sargent J, Richmond L, Kellis D, Smith M, Zacks J J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 2023; 50(7):1013-1034.
PMID: 38095956 PMC: 11822856. DOI: 10.1037/xlm0001317.
Distortions in Spatial Mental Representation Affect Sketch Maps in Young Adults.
Lopez A, Bosco A Neurol Int. 2022; 14(4):771-783.
PMID: 36278688 PMC: 9590050. DOI: 10.3390/neurolint14040064.