The Key of the Maze: The role of mental imagery and cognitive flexibility in navigational planning

Neuroscience Letters
Alessia BocchiLaura Piccardi

Abstract

Spatial navigation planning ability relies on both mental imagery and cognitive flexibility. Considering the importance of planning ability in everyday life, several neuropsychological tests are used in clinical practice for its assessment, although some of these are not aimed at assessing the strategies of navigational planning. The Porteus Maze Test (PMT) and the Key Search Task (KST) require to plan a strategy in a maze and in an imagined space, respectively. To the best of our knowledge, although these two tests share some features, the relationship between them has never been explored. The purpose of the present study was to investigate, for the first time, the relationship between the PMT and the KST performances in 38 healthy subjects in order to understand the implications of this association for the assessment of spatial navigation ability. Subjects were subdivided in bad or good navigation planners on the basis of the their KST score. The results of the study have revealed a significant difference (t=2.35; p=0.03) in the number of errors made at the PMT by bad navigational planners (0.78±0.28) and good navigational planners (0.10±0.06). The first group (bad navigational planners) made more errors at the PMT than the g...Continue Reading

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Citations

Apr 17, 2020·Frontiers in Human Neuroscience·Alessia BocchiLaura Piccardi
Nov 1, 2017·Frontiers in Neuroscience·Maddalena BocciaLaura Piccardi
Feb 25, 2019·Cognitive Processing·Massimiliano PalmieroMarta Olivetti Belardinelli
Jul 25, 2019·Experimental Brain Research·Alessia BocchiLaura Piccardi
Sep 1, 2021·Memory & Cognition·Georgia A FloridouRebecca S Schaefer

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