Abstract

Abstract Sixty male university students guided themselves, while blindfolded, through curved and straight pathways 27 ft. long. Thirty subjects moved ten consecutive times through left-turning patterns, while a second 30 subjects walked ten times through right-turning arcs. Aftereffects were evidenced by reports of opposite curvature in a straight test pathway immediately following satiation. A typical decay curve was recorded, based upon the percent of the subjects experiencing curvature, by trial, through the straight test pathway. No significant differences were noted upon comparing both the reports of those satiated right versus those satiated left, and of subjects receiving an initial trial in the test pathway prior to satiation, versus the subjects who did not.

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