Neural representation of geoinformation in the human brain: affected by abstraction levels and spatial scales

The rapid development of cartographical methods has led to cognitive differences in the user experience, presenting a new challenge to microscale research on geoinformation. Prior studies have been constrained by methodologies, and how the human brain represents geoinformation with different levels...

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Main Authors: Tianyu Yang, Bo Zhao, Song Gao, Weihua Dong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2025-07-01
Series:Annals of GIS
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Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/19475683.2025.2487979
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author Tianyu Yang
Bo Zhao
Song Gao
Weihua Dong
author_facet Tianyu Yang
Bo Zhao
Song Gao
Weihua Dong
author_sort Tianyu Yang
collection DOAJ
description The rapid development of cartographical methods has led to cognitive differences in the user experience, presenting a new challenge to microscale research on geoinformation. Prior studies have been constrained by methodologies, and how the human brain represents geoinformation with different levels of abstraction across geographic scales remains unclear. In this study, we conducted a cognitive experiment using functional magnetic resonance imaging with thirteen participants to explore the neural representations of geoinformation abstraction levels and spatial scales. Univariate analysis was utilized to examine the task-state brain imaging representations, and representational similarity analysis was employed to quantify the correlation between two variables and brain signals. We found that the increase in the geoinformation abstraction level decreases the activity of working memory processing, and 3D image induces users to organize geoinformation using egocentric spatial references. Extremely high or low levels of abstraction can hinder effective visual attention allocation. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on the neural representation of geoinformation’s abstraction levels and spatial scales, offering new neuroimaging evidence for the theoretical framework of cartography and providing an empirical spatial cognition foundation for future cartographic design.
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spelling doaj-art-23e424b7dd8c429799f13e3aafded1f42025-08-25T09:28:48ZengTaylor & Francis GroupAnnals of GIS1947-56831947-56912025-07-0131343344810.1080/19475683.2025.2487979Neural representation of geoinformation in the human brain: affected by abstraction levels and spatial scalesTianyu Yang0Bo Zhao1Song Gao2Weihua Dong3Advanced Interdisciplinary Institute of Satellite Applications, State Key Laboratory of Earth Surface Processes and Hazards Risk Governance, Faculty of Geographical Science, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, ChinaDepartment of Geography, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USADepartment of Geography, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USAAdvanced Interdisciplinary Institute of Satellite Applications, State Key Laboratory of Earth Surface Processes and Hazards Risk Governance, Faculty of Geographical Science, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, ChinaThe rapid development of cartographical methods has led to cognitive differences in the user experience, presenting a new challenge to microscale research on geoinformation. Prior studies have been constrained by methodologies, and how the human brain represents geoinformation with different levels of abstraction across geographic scales remains unclear. In this study, we conducted a cognitive experiment using functional magnetic resonance imaging with thirteen participants to explore the neural representations of geoinformation abstraction levels and spatial scales. Univariate analysis was utilized to examine the task-state brain imaging representations, and representational similarity analysis was employed to quantify the correlation between two variables and brain signals. We found that the increase in the geoinformation abstraction level decreases the activity of working memory processing, and 3D image induces users to organize geoinformation using egocentric spatial references. Extremely high or low levels of abstraction can hinder effective visual attention allocation. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on the neural representation of geoinformation’s abstraction levels and spatial scales, offering new neuroimaging evidence for the theoretical framework of cartography and providing an empirical spatial cognition foundation for future cartographic design.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/19475683.2025.2487979Geoinformationspatial cognitionabstraction levelspatial scalefunctional magnetic resonance imaging
spellingShingle Tianyu Yang
Bo Zhao
Song Gao
Weihua Dong
Neural representation of geoinformation in the human brain: affected by abstraction levels and spatial scales
Annals of GIS
Geoinformation
spatial cognition
abstraction level
spatial scale
functional magnetic resonance imaging
title Neural representation of geoinformation in the human brain: affected by abstraction levels and spatial scales
title_full Neural representation of geoinformation in the human brain: affected by abstraction levels and spatial scales
title_fullStr Neural representation of geoinformation in the human brain: affected by abstraction levels and spatial scales
title_full_unstemmed Neural representation of geoinformation in the human brain: affected by abstraction levels and spatial scales
title_short Neural representation of geoinformation in the human brain: affected by abstraction levels and spatial scales
title_sort neural representation of geoinformation in the human brain affected by abstraction levels and spatial scales
topic Geoinformation
spatial cognition
abstraction level
spatial scale
functional magnetic resonance imaging
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/19475683.2025.2487979
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AT bozhao neuralrepresentationofgeoinformationinthehumanbrainaffectedbyabstractionlevelsandspatialscales
AT songgao neuralrepresentationofgeoinformationinthehumanbrainaffectedbyabstractionlevelsandspatialscales
AT weihuadong neuralrepresentationofgeoinformationinthehumanbrainaffectedbyabstractionlevelsandspatialscales