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Planning routes around the world: International evidence for southern route preferences
Authors:Tad T. Brunyé  ,Elena Andonova,Chiara Meneghetti,Matthijs L. Noordzij,Francesca Pazzaglia,Rasmus Wienemann,Caroline R. Mahoney,Holly A. Taylor
Affiliation:1. U.S. Army Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center, Natick, MA, USA;2. Tufts University, Department of Psychology, USA;3. New Bulgarian University, Department of Cognitive Science and Psychology, Sofia, Bulgaria;4. University of Padua, Department of General Psychology, Padua, Italy;5. University of Twente, Department of Cognitive Psychology and Ergonomics, Enschede, The Netherlands;6. University of Bremen, SFB/TR 8 Spatial Cognition, Bremen, Germany
Abstract:Three studies test whether the southern route preference, which describes the tendency for route planners to disproportionately select south- rather than north-going routes, can be attributed to regional elevation patterns; specifically, we ask whether this effect replicates in three topographically disparate international regions, one of which is characterized by higher elevations to the north and lower to the south (Padua, Italy), and two characterized by higher elevations to the south and lower to the north (Enschede, Netherlands; Sofia, Bulgaria). In all cases, we found strong evidence that route planners disproportionately select south- rather than north-going routes at rates exceeding chance. We conclude that the southern route preference is driven by strong associations between canonical direction and perceived effort of route traversal; these effects are somewhat perplexing given that such associations are not founded in the reality of physical space.
Keywords:Spatial orientation   Wayfinding   Locomotion   Embodied cognition
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