| Literature DB >> 26378006 |
Abstract
When making two bars haptically parallel to each other, large deviations have been observed, most likely caused by the bias of a hand-centered egocentric reference frame. A consistent finding is that women show significantly larger deviations than men when performing this task. It has been suggested that this difference might be due to the fact that women are more egocentrically oriented than men or are less efficient in overcoming the egocentric bias of the hand. If this is indeed the case, reducing the bias of the egocentric reference frame should eliminate the above-mentioned gender difference. This was investigated in the current study. Sixty participants (30 men, 30 women) were instructed to haptically match (task HP) the orientation of a test bar with the dominant hand to the orientation of a reference bar that was perceived with the non-dominant hand. In a haptic visual task (task HV), in which only the reference bar and exploring hand were out of view, no motor response was required, but participants had to "match" the perceived orientation by verbally naming the parallel orientation that was read out on a test protractor. Both females and males performed better in the HV task than in the HP task. Significant gender effects were only found in the haptic parallelity task (HP), corroborating the idea that women perform at the same level as men when the egocentric bias of the hand is reduced.Entities:
Keywords: Allocentric; Egocentric; Frame of reference; Gender; Haptic perception; Parallelity
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26378006 PMCID: PMC4713722 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-015-4437-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Brain Res ISSN: 0014-4819 Impact factor: 1.972
Fig. 1The protractor and the reference bar with the attached magnets
Fig. 2The test protractor containing letters and numbers that was used to “match” the orientations in the haptic visual parallelity task
Fig. 3Mean deviations and standard errors for the different orientations in the tasks. HP haptic parallelity task, HV haptic visual parallelity task
Fig. 4Mean deviations and standard errors for males and females in the tasks. HP haptic parallelity task, HV haptic visual parallelity task