Path integration, rather than being suppressed, is used to update spatial views in familiar environments with constantly available landmarks

Cognition. 2023 Nov 10;242:105662. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105662. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTThis project tested three hypotheses conceptualizing the interaction between path integration based on self-motion and piloting based on landmarks in a familiar environment with persistent landmarks. The first hypothesis posits that path integration functions automatically, as in environments lacking persistent landmarks (environment-independent hypothesis). The second hypothesis suggests that persistent landmarks suppress path integration (suppression hypothesis). The third hypothesis proposes that path integration updates the spatial views of the environment (updating-spatial-views hypothesis). Participants learned a specific object's location. Subsequently, they undertook an outbound path originating from the object and then indicated the object's location (homing). In Experiments 1&1b, there were landmarks throughout the first 9 trials. On some later trials, the landmarks were presented during the outbound path but unexpectedly removed during homing (catch trials). On the last trials, there were no landmarks throughout (baseline trials). Experiments 2-3 were similar but added two identical objects (the original one and a rotated distractor) during homing on the catch and baseline trials. Experiment 4 replaced two identical objects with two groups of landmarks. The results showed that in Experiments 1&1b, homing angular error on the first catch trial was significa...
Source: Cognition - Category: Neurology Authors: Source Type: research