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Journal Article

Citation

Heller MA. Percept. Psychophys. 1993; 54(5): 675-681.

Affiliation

Winston-Salem State University, North Carolina 27110.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, Psychonomic Society, Publisher Springer-Nature)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8290336

Abstract

This study was an attempt to clarify the mechanisms responsible for the benefits of visual guidance in tactual braille recognition. Subjects touched +90 degrees tilted braille under normal room lighting, or with low lighting, with or without visual guidance. Both visual information about finger angle and spatial reference information were manipulated with stained glass and light-emitting diodes. The provision of visual information about finger angle alone was no help to braille recognition, and performance was low. Adding visual spatial reference information to vision of finger angle raised performance. However, recognition accuracy was also substantially improved by low lighting. The benefits of darkness for haptics did not generalize to the reading of upright, two-letter braille words. It was proposed that extraneous visual information may distract sighted subjects in haptic tasks that require mental rotation of visual images.


Language: en

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