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The visual perception of outdoor angular spatial relationships.

J Farley Norman1,2,3,4, William B Marcum1,5, Maria Carmichael1,6

  • 1Department of Psychological Sciences, Ogden College of Science and Engineering, Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, KY, USA.

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Older adults demonstrated superior accuracy in judging angles compared to younger adults, suggesting age-related improvements in spatial perception beyond just distance estimation. This study explored age and angle judgment in an outdoor environment.

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Human Perception

Background:

  • Previous research indicates visual distance perception is maintained or improves with age.
  • The current study investigates if this age-related trend extends to other spatial abilities, specifically angle judgment.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate younger and older adults' ability to judge angular spatial relationships in a natural outdoor setting.
  • To determine if older adults outperform younger adults in angle perception, similar to findings in distance perception.

Main Methods:

  • Thirty adults (younger and older) participated in a single experiment.
  • Participants judged 12 different angles formed by environmental objects like trees and signs.
  • Performance was assessed by comparing judged angles to physical stimulus angles.

Main Results:

  • Overall, observers accurately judged angles, with 74% of variance explained by physical angles (r=0.86).
  • Older observers were significantly more accurate than younger observers (Cohen's d=0.72).
  • Consistent local distortions in angle perception were observed, with some angles perceived as larger and others smaller than their physical magnitude.

Conclusions:

  • Age-related superiority in spatial judgment extends to angle perception, not just distance.
  • Environmental features associated with linear perspective may influence local distortions in perceived angle magnitude.