Successful spatial navigating is one of the most fundamental behavioural problems and requires complex cognitive operations. To navigate in both familiar and unfamiliar environments, we need to monitor various internal and external cues, build, access, and update mental representations of space, plan and execute movements. In the Wayfinding & Spatial Cognition Lab we conduct research into the psychological processes underlying navigation and wayfinding behaviour addressing both fundamental and applied research questions. We make use of a variety of methods including behavioural navigation experiments, virtual reality techniques, static and mobile eye-tracking and cognitive modelling.

Click on image to see a short video of our virtual reality setup that we now combined with a head mounted (mobile) eye-tracker. This allows us to study visual attention across a large field of view while participants solve navigation tasks in highly controlled virtual environments that are build to exactly match the experimental demands.

The “Wayfinding & Spatial Cognition Lab” is currently involved in a number of fundamental and applied research projects:-

We investigate the effects of cognitive ageing on navigation skills and the selection of appropriate wayfinding strategies (click here for recent publication)

In collaboration with Prof. T. Wolbers (University of Magdeburg, Germany), we investigate the neural basis of fundamental navigation processes using functional brain imaging.

Using large scale virtual environments, we investigate search patterns in humans and compare it to existing foraging theories from the animal literature (in collaboration with Dr. Thomas Hills, Warwick University)

In collaboration with Dr. Julie Kirkby (BU) we investigate the development of visual search strategies by testing adults and school students (click here to see a video of the paradigm we use).

We just received funding from “Army of Angels” and the BU Foundation to start an exciting new project investigating the relationship between PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) and navigation.

Dr. Jan Wiener in the Psychology Research Centre leads the “Wayfinding and Spatial Cognition” lab. For more information about our projects, the team, and our publications, please visit our lab page at www.spatial-cognition.org. You can also follow us on Twitter.

We are always eager to discuss new project ideas and collaborations, so please get in contact by dropping me an email: jwiener@bournemouth.ac.uk