Effects of maze appearance on maze solving
Author(s)
Semizer, Yelda; Yu, Dian; Wan, Qianqian; Balas, Benjamin; Rosenholtz, Ruth
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As mazes are typically complex, cluttered stimuli, solving them is likely limited by visual crowding. Thus, several aspects of the appearance of the maze – the thickness, spacing, and curvature of the paths, as well as the texture of both paths and walls – likely influence the performance. In the current study, we investigate the effects of perceptual aspects of maze design on maze-solving performance to understand the role of crowding and visual complexity. We conducted two experiments using a set of controlled stimuli to examine the effects of path and wall thickness, as well as the style of rendering used for both paths and walls. Experiment 1 finds that maze-solving time increases with thicker paths (thus thinner walls). Experiment 2 replicates this finding while also showing that maze-solving time increases when mazes have wavy walls, which are likely more crowded, rather than straight walls. Our findings imply a role of both crowding and figure/ground segmentation in mental maze solving and suggest reformulating the growth cone models.
Date issued
2025-01-10Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive SciencesJournal
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics
Publisher
Springer US
Citation
Semizer, Y., Yu, D., Wan, Q. et al. Effects of maze appearance on maze solving. Atten Percept Psychophys (2025).
Version: Final published version