2010
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-14075-4_61
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Haptic Recognition of Non-figurative Tactile Pictures in the Blind: Does Life-Time Proportion without Visual Experience Matter?

Abstract: Abstract. The present study tests whether age at onset of total blindness and the proportion of life-time without visual experience affect the haptic processing and recognition of tactile pictures in a sample of 20 totally blind adults. We also examine the type of mental strategy (visual, non-visual) used to perform the haptic recognition task. The results indicate that haptic processing of nonfigurative tactile pictures may be efficiently achieved with different levels of visual experience and different stra… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The age at onset of blindness varied from 0 to 27 (mean value: 8.71, SD: 8.51). The proportion of lifetime without visual experience (Lebaz, Picard, & Jouffrais, 2010) varied from 0.24 (meaning that the participant spent 24% of his life without visual experience) to 1 (meaning that the participant was born blind). The mean value was 0.87 (SD: 0.23).…”
Section: Participantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The age at onset of blindness varied from 0 to 27 (mean value: 8.71, SD: 8.51). The proportion of lifetime without visual experience (Lebaz, Picard, & Jouffrais, 2010) varied from 0.24 (meaning that the participant spent 24% of his life without visual experience) to 1 (meaning that the participant was born blind). The mean value was 0.87 (SD: 0.23).…”
Section: Participantsmentioning
confidence: 99%