“…Moreover, time and distance may well be confusable, and indeed this may be the case in the present experiments. Participants, while standing still or performing acactual distance and rewalked distance, indicating that the acquisition of spatial knowledge using this methodology preserves metric properties of real environments (Zwaan & Radvansky, 1998), and is equivalent to that acquired through direct experience with space (Denis & Cocude, 1989;Denis & Zimmer, 1992). Indeed, in all three experiments, remembered segment distances were sensitive to the variation in the actual distances: Short distances were overestimated, whereas longer ones were underestimated (e.g., Byrne, 1979;Decety et al, 1989;Philbeck, Klatzky, Behrmann, Loomis, & Goodridge, 2001;Radvansky, CarlsonRadvansky, & Irwin, 1995;Thompson, 1983;Thorndyke & Hayes-Roth, 1982).…”