{"title":"Do Males Feel What Females Feel? Investigating the Influence of Sex on Haptic Abilities","authors":"Isha Suri, Tim Wilson","doi":"10.5206/wurjhns.2023-24.2","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Interacting with objects in one’s environment is a part of life, and at all times these interactions require the use of somatosensory systems, whether it be visual, auditory, or haptic. Within visual realms, spatial abilities (SA) represent the cognitive capacity to remember & manipulate mental representations of objects to problem solve. Haptic abilities (HA) refer to the cognitive ability to acquire information & meaningfully manipulate objects through touch. Males consistently outperform females on standardized SA tests such as the Mental Rotations Test (MRT). The objective of this study is to investigate the influence of sex on HA, which is currently unknown. Given the removal of any visual spatial advantage in solely haptic tasks, it was hypothesized that although males outperform females on spatial ability tasks, this sex difference will be removed in tasks measuring HA. The MRT was used to measure SA, and a 3D version of the MRT coined the Haptic Abilities Test (HAT) was used to measure HA. The HAT was completed under two test conditions: a haptic (H) condition required the use of solely touch, while the other condition used sight & haptics (SH) to discriminate shape. Males outperformed females in the SH condition. However, this sex difference was eliminated in the purely haptic (H) HAT condition. In this condition, both sexes arrived at solutions through the differential use of haptic exploratory strategies. Given pandemic-driven migrations to online education where no haptics are possible, these findings raise concerns. Specifically, if haptics work to reduce the advantage males have over females when completing spatial tasks, the current online shift adversely affects females. Understanding the influence of sex on haptics can therefore result in more equitable learning environments. \n ","PeriodicalId":321920,"journal":{"name":"Western Undergraduate Research Journal: Health and Natural Sciences","volume":"345 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Western Undergraduate Research Journal: Health and Natural Sciences","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5206/wurjhns.2023-24.2","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Interacting with objects in one’s environment is a part of life, and at all times these interactions require the use of somatosensory systems, whether it be visual, auditory, or haptic. Within visual realms, spatial abilities (SA) represent the cognitive capacity to remember & manipulate mental representations of objects to problem solve. Haptic abilities (HA) refer to the cognitive ability to acquire information & meaningfully manipulate objects through touch. Males consistently outperform females on standardized SA tests such as the Mental Rotations Test (MRT). The objective of this study is to investigate the influence of sex on HA, which is currently unknown. Given the removal of any visual spatial advantage in solely haptic tasks, it was hypothesized that although males outperform females on spatial ability tasks, this sex difference will be removed in tasks measuring HA. The MRT was used to measure SA, and a 3D version of the MRT coined the Haptic Abilities Test (HAT) was used to measure HA. The HAT was completed under two test conditions: a haptic (H) condition required the use of solely touch, while the other condition used sight & haptics (SH) to discriminate shape. Males outperformed females in the SH condition. However, this sex difference was eliminated in the purely haptic (H) HAT condition. In this condition, both sexes arrived at solutions through the differential use of haptic exploratory strategies. Given pandemic-driven migrations to online education where no haptics are possible, these findings raise concerns. Specifically, if haptics work to reduce the advantage males have over females when completing spatial tasks, the current online shift adversely affects females. Understanding the influence of sex on haptics can therefore result in more equitable learning environments.
与环境中的物体进行互动是生活的一部分,在任何时候,这些互动都需要使用体感系统,无论是视觉、听觉还是触觉。在视觉领域,空间能力(SA)代表了记忆和操作物体心理表征以解决问题的认知能力。触觉能力(HA)是指通过触觉获取信息和有意义地操作物体的认知能力。在心理旋转测试(MRT)等标准化 SA 测试中,男性的表现一直优于女性。本研究的目的是调查性别对 HA 的影响。鉴于视觉空间优势在触觉任务中被完全消除,因此假设虽然男性在空间能力任务中优于女性,但在测量 HA 的任务中,这种性别差异也会被消除。MRT用于测量SA,而MRT的三维版本--触觉能力测试(HAT)则用于测量HA。触觉能力测试在两种测试条件下完成:一种触觉(H)条件要求仅使用触觉,而另一种条件则使用视觉和触觉(SH)来辨别形状。在 SH 条件下,男性的表现优于女性。然而,这种性别差异在纯触觉(H)HAT 条件下被消除了。在这种情况下,两性都通过不同的触觉探索策略找到了解决方案。鉴于大流行病导致的在线教育迁移,在这种情况下不可能使用触觉,这些发现引起了人们的关注。具体来说,如果触觉技术能降低男性在完成空间任务时相对于女性的优势,那么当前的在线转变就会对女性产生不利影响。因此,了解性别对触觉的影响可以创造出更公平的学习环境。