{"title":"4 year olds localize tactile stimuli using an external frame of reference","authors":"Jannath Begum, A. Bremner, Dorothy Cowie","doi":"10.1163/187847612X646631","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Adults show a deficit in their ability to localize tactile stimuli to their hands when their arms are in the less familiar, crossed posture (e.g., Overvliet et al., 2011; Shore et al., 2002). It is thought that this ‘crossed-hands effect’ arises due to conflict (when the hands are crossed) between the anatomical and external frames of reference within which touches can be perceived. Pagel et al. (2009) studied this effect in young children and observed that the crossed-hands effect first emerges after 5.5-years. In their task, children were asked to judge the temporal order of stimuli presented across their hands in quick succession. Here, we present the findings of a simpler task in which children were asked to localize a single vibrotactile stimulus presented to either hand. We also compared the effect of posture under conditions in which children either did, or did not, have visual information about current hand posture. With this method, we observed a crossed-hands effect in the youngest age-group testable; 4-year-olds. We conclude that young children localize tactile stimuli with respect to an external frame of reference from early in childhood or before (cf. Bremner et al., 2008). Additionally, when visual information about posture was made available, 4- to 5-year-olds’ tactile localization accuracy in the uncrossed-hands posture deteriorated and the crossed-hands effect disappeared. We discuss these findings with respect to visual–tactile-proprioceptive integration abilities of young children and examine potential sources of the discrepancies between our findings and those of Pagel et al. (2009).","PeriodicalId":49553,"journal":{"name":"Seeing and Perceiving","volume":"25 1","pages":"41-41"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2012-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1163/187847612X646631","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Seeing and Perceiving","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1163/187847612X646631","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
Adults show a deficit in their ability to localize tactile stimuli to their hands when their arms are in the less familiar, crossed posture (e.g., Overvliet et al., 2011; Shore et al., 2002). It is thought that this ‘crossed-hands effect’ arises due to conflict (when the hands are crossed) between the anatomical and external frames of reference within which touches can be perceived. Pagel et al. (2009) studied this effect in young children and observed that the crossed-hands effect first emerges after 5.5-years. In their task, children were asked to judge the temporal order of stimuli presented across their hands in quick succession. Here, we present the findings of a simpler task in which children were asked to localize a single vibrotactile stimulus presented to either hand. We also compared the effect of posture under conditions in which children either did, or did not, have visual information about current hand posture. With this method, we observed a crossed-hands effect in the youngest age-group testable; 4-year-olds. We conclude that young children localize tactile stimuli with respect to an external frame of reference from early in childhood or before (cf. Bremner et al., 2008). Additionally, when visual information about posture was made available, 4- to 5-year-olds’ tactile localization accuracy in the uncrossed-hands posture deteriorated and the crossed-hands effect disappeared. We discuss these findings with respect to visual–tactile-proprioceptive integration abilities of young children and examine potential sources of the discrepancies between our findings and those of Pagel et al. (2009).
当成年人的手臂处于不太熟悉的交叉姿势时,他们将触觉刺激定位到手部的能力存在缺陷(例如,Overvliet et al., 2011;Shore et al., 2002)。据认为,这种“双手交叉效应”是由于解剖学和外部参照系之间的冲突(当双手交叉时)而产生的,在这些参照系中,触摸可以被感知。Pagel et al.(2009)在幼儿中研究了这种效应,并观察到双手交叉效应在5.5岁后首次出现。在他们的任务中,孩子们被要求判断快速连续出现在他们手上的刺激的时间顺序。在这里,我们展示了一个更简单的任务的发现,在这个任务中,孩子们被要求定位一个单一的振动触觉刺激,这个刺激呈现在他们的任何一只手上。我们还比较了两种情况下姿势的影响,一种是儿童对当前的手部姿势有视觉信息,另一种是没有。通过这种方法,我们在最年轻的年龄组中观察到交叉手效应;4岁的孩子。我们得出的结论是,幼儿在童年早期或更早的时候就会根据外部参考框架定位触觉刺激(参见Bremner et al., 2008)。此外,当提供姿势的视觉信息时,4 ~ 5岁儿童在非双手交叉姿势下的触觉定位精度下降,双手交叉效应消失。我们讨论了这些关于幼儿视觉-触觉-本体感觉整合能力的发现,并检查了我们的发现与Pagel等人(2009)之间差异的潜在来源。