The influence of memory on indoor environment exploration: A numerical study
Authored by Michael Lees, Peter M A Sloot, Vaisagh Viswanathan
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.3758/s13428-015-0604-1
Sponsors:
Russian Scientific Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Understanding human behavior in the context of exploration and
navigation is an important but challenging problem. Such understanding
can help in the design of safe structures and spaces that implicitly aid
humans during evacuation or other emergency situations. In particular, the role that memory plays in this process is something that is crucial
to understand. In this paper, we develop a novel serious game-based
experimental approach to understanding the non-randomness and the impact
of memory on the human exploration process. We show that a simple memory
model, with a depth of between 6 and 8 steps, is sufficient to
approximate a ``human-like' level of exploration efficiency. We also
demonstrate the advantages that a game-based experimental methodology
brings to these kinds of experiments in the amount of data that can be
collected as compared to traditional experiments. We feel that these
findings have important implications for `safety-by-design' in complex
infrastructural structures.
Tags
knowledge
information
technology
games
Acquisition
Perception
Navigation
Virtual environment
Working-memory
Familiarity