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Visual-Spatial > Spatial Reasoning

Points of View

Screenshot of HappyNeuron Pro exercise Points of View

Please note that you can only play the exercise once on this page. See the free trial section below for full access!

Visual-Spatial > Spatial Reasoning

Points of View

In this exercise, the user must identify their location in space. The user must analyze and deduce the observer’s location on a map according to what they see and then deduce what the user sees according to the location on a map. 

Brain Areas Engaged 
how points of view engages the brain.

Learn more about this exercise:

Spatial reasoning is the primary cognitive skill targeted in this exercise. Still, the user will need attention to detail and working memory to successfully place themselves within the picture.

The parietal lobe integrates sensory information from different modalities, particularly determining spatial sense and navigation. This enables regions of the parietal cortex to map objects perceived visually into body coordinate positions. The parietal lobe involves functions such as discriminating between sensory stimuli, locating and recognizing parts of the body, and spatial orientation.

Location, distance, direction, and perspective are characteristics of spatial orientation that affect how we gather, process, and express information. When attempting to locate ourselves on a map, we primarily use skills from points of view. We must take the 3D information and rely on the 2D map to navigate appropriately.

You can modify:

  • The number of series (4, 6, 8, or 10)
  • The type of exercise (where you are in the picture, what you see, or both)
  • The number of figures presented (5, 7, or 9)
  • The color of figures (identical or different)
  • The number of points of view (2, 4, or 6)
  • The number of tries (1, 2, or 3)
  • The response time (unlimited, 30, 20, 10, or 5 seconds).

Over 3,200 unique exercise configurations and significant data set depth.

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Other spatial reasoning exercises:

Sleight of Hands

Visual-spatial reasoning

Turn Around and Around

Visual-spatial, pattern recognition

Screenshot of HappyNeuron Pro exercise Entangled Figures

Entangled Figures

Visual-spatial, pattern recognition

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