Language and Spatial Cognition
Language and Spatial Cognition
COSIT '97 Proceedings of the International Conference on Spatial Information Theory: A Theoretical Basis for GIS
A Cognitive Assessment of Topological Spatial Relations: Results from an Empirical Investigation
COSIT '97 Proceedings of the International Conference on Spatial Information Theory: A Theoretical Basis for GIS
Using Orientation Information for Qualitative Spatial Reasoning
Proceedings of the International Conference GIS - From Space to Territory: Theories and Methods of Spatio-Temporal Reasoning on Theories and Methods of Spatio-Temporal Reasoning in Geographic Space
How much information do you need? schematic maps in wayfinding and self localisation
SC'06 Proceedings of the 2006 international conference on Spatial Cognition V: reasoning, action, interaction
Use of reference directions in spatial encoding
Spatial cognition III
The endpoint hypothesis: a topological-cognitive assessment of geographic scale movement patterns
COSIT'09 Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Spatial information theory
Mental tectonics: rendering consistent µMaps
COSIT'09 Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Spatial information theory
Adaptable path planning in regionalized environments
COSIT'09 Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Spatial information theory
An analysis of direction and motion concepts in verbal descriptions of route choices
COSIT'09 Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Spatial information theory
GIScience'10 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Geographic information science
Interpreting motion events of pairs of moving objects
Geoinformatica
Evaluating and minimizing ambiguities in qualitative route instructions
Proceedings of the 19th ACM SIGSPATIAL International Conference on Advances in Geographic Information Systems
On qualitative route descriptions: representation and computational complexity
IJCAI'11 Proceedings of the Twenty-Second international joint conference on Artificial Intelligence - Volume Volume Two
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Directional relations and frames of reference
Geoinformatica
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This paper discusses the conceptualization of turn directions along traveled routes. Foremost, we are interested in the influence that language has on the conceptualization of turn directions. Two experiments are presented that contrast the way people group turns into similarity classes when they expect to verbally label the turns, as compared to when they do not. We are particularly interested in the role that major axes such as the perpendicular left and right axis play--are they boundaries of sectors or central prototypes, or do they have two functions: boundary and prototype? Our results support a) findings that linguistic and nonlinguistic categorization differ and b) that prototypes in linguistic tasks serve additionally as boundaries in nonlinguistic tasks, i.e. they fulfill a double function. We conclude by discussing implications for cognitive models of learning environmental layouts and for route-instruction systems in different modalities.