The Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory

 

 


 

Abstracts


 

 Visual mental rotation of possible and impossible objects

 

Itiel E. Dror

 

 

Participants were tested on two visual mental rotation tasks using three-dimensional “possible and “impossibleshapes. Both types of stimuli can be easily encoded by their parts and how they are spatially organized. However, while possible shapes can also be easily encoded as a global image, it is more difficult to encode impossible shapes in such a way. Participants visually rotated both types of stimuli at comparable rates, reflecting that local representations were used in the process of visual mental rotation.

 

[FULL PAPER]


Dror, I. E., Ivey, C., & Rogus, C. (1997). Visual mental rotation of possible and impossible objects. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 4 (2), 242-247.


  To Dr. Dror’s homepage.