Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 December 2009
In this book, the opposition between systems based on relative and absolute coordinates plays a major role. One pole of this opposition is familiar: we live in a culture in which relative coordinates organize most of our more self-aware spatial behaviour. This dependence on directions based on viewer-centred left vs. right is built into our cultural Corballis has put it). But the other pole of the opposition, cultures that organize things in absolute coordinates, is altogether less familiar, and in this chapter I try to bring this less familiar alternative world to life, by providing details from two such ‘absolute’ communities in which I have been fortunate enough to have had the opportunity to work.
In Chapter 2 we were concerned with how frames of reference can be correlated across different kinds of mental representations, and it was argued that one can distinguish the same three types of reference frame, intrinsic, relative and absolute, across the different perceptual modalities and their internal representations. In this chapter, I will produce the first evidence for a tendency for individuals to specialize their frames of reference towards the relative or the absolute across all these different kinds of representation. That is, it seems that individuals prefer to use just one frame of reference across modalities, for example across language, nonverbal communication media like gesture, non-linguistic spatial memory, and spatial reasoning.
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