Geographical Cues and Developmental Exposure: Navigational Style, Wayfinding Anxiety, and Childhood Experience in the Faroe Islands

The current study assessed potential relationships among childhood wayfinding experience, navigational style, and adult wayfinding anxiety in the Faroe Islands. The Faroe Islands are of interest because they have an unusual geography that may promote the use of an orientational style of navigation (...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human nature (Hawthorne, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2016-03, Vol.27 (1), p.68-81
1. Verfasser: Schug, Mariah G.
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description The current study assessed potential relationships among childhood wayfinding experience, navigational style, and adult wayfinding anxiety in the Faroe Islands. The Faroe Islands are of interest because they have an unusual geography that may promote the use of an orientational style of navigation (e.g., use of cardinal directions). Faroese adults completed questionnaires assessing (1) their permitted childhood range sizes, (2) the types of navigational strategies they use, and (3) the amount of anxiety they experience when navigating in adulthood. Males had more childhood wayfinding experience, used the orientation strategy at a higher rate, and showed lower levels of wayfinding anxiety. When compared with other cultures, both Faroese women and men appear to embrace orientation strategies at an unusually high rate. Childhood experience was not conclusively linked to later wayfinding anxiety. However, the current findings raise the possibility that children who have particularly small ranges in childhood may be especially anxious when navigating in adulthood.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Anthropology
Anxiety - psychology
Behavioral Sciences
Biological Psychology
Cues
Denmark
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Orientation - physiology
Parenting - psychology
Sex Characteristics
Social Sciences
Space Perception
Spatial Navigation - physiology
Surveys and Questionnaires
Young Adult
title Geographical Cues and Developmental Exposure: Navigational Style, Wayfinding Anxiety, and Childhood Experience in the Faroe Islands
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