@article{oai:kanazawa-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001866, author = {Yoshimura, Hirokazu and 吉村, 浩一}, journal = {金沢大学文学部論集. 行動科学科篇}, month = {Mar}, note = {Following the examination of the introspective data of a visual up-down reversal experiment (Yoshimura, 1991a, in Japanese), the present paper deals with the tests' data of the same experiment (Kanazawa '90). Nine tests were conducted to estimate the adaptive changes under the reversed condition for 14 days. In test 1 and 2, the degree and the direction of "the swinging of the scene" were examined, respectively. The degree was estimated by means of increases of critical flicker fusion (CFF) values during vertical head movements when fixating a flickering small light (LED). Although not showing the adaptive decreases of the CFF values during the goggles-on period, the subject showed clear after-effect. The direction of "the swinging of the scene" was examined by using a method of arrow-shaped afterimage. Test 3 was Arrow Drawing, where the subject named different names to the same arrows, which means his frame of reference was changing as the goggles-on time went on. Test 4 was Clock Reading (only the short hand was presented), in which the subject showed not a few left-right reversal responses in the middle of the goggles-on period. For example, to the objective 5 o'clock, he answered "7 o'clock." In test 5, Direction of Arrow-Shaped Afterimage, the same stimulus was used as in the test 2. Subject was required to take various kinds of postures, that is, head-up, head-straight-ahead, head-down, and looking through his straddled legs. Under these postures, he answered the directions of the arrows. In test 6, some vertically ambiguous face figures were presented to the subject and he was asked to identify their expression, sex, and age. In these two tests the subject did not show clear adaptive changes, but showed some interesting responses which would contribute to the understanding of the up-down reversal world. Judgement of the Turning Left or Right (test 7), Judgement of the Handedness (test 8), and Identification of the Left and Right Hand (test 9) were the tests that might be considered to be concerned not in the up-down dimension but only in the left-right dimension. But the subject showed consistent errors for the particular stimuli. The results mean that he used mental rotation strategies to manage in the up-down reversal world., 金沢大学文学部}, pages = {1--31}, title = {上下反転めがね14日間着用実験(金沢'90) : テストデータの検討}, volume = {12}, year = {1992} }