Date of Award
Fall 12-15-2025
Document Type
Undergraduate Honors Thesis
Degree Name
Bachelor of Arts in Psychology
Department
Psychological Sciences
Advisor
Rachel Blaser, PhD
Abstract
Human solutions to the Traveling Salespersons Problem (TSP) have been proposed to employ heuristics integrating global and local spatial information (Pizlo et al., 2006). Because different neuroanatomical regions may be involved in local vs. global processing, as well as attentional shift between levels, performance on the TSP may provide useful insight into changes that occur in the brain as a result of age or of neurodegenerative disorders (Slavin, 2002). In a previous study, we compared the cognitive processes used to solve spatial problems on a large scale (moving through space) and on a small scale (on a sheet of paper). We discovered there was no difference in the percent above optimal (PAO) between the drawn route and the traveled route. The current study uses eyetracking to examine target fixations during the TSP. The question was whether participants compensate for the presence of distractor cues by constructing a mental outline of the configuration before selecting a route.
Digital USD Citation
Levy, Kanan, "Eyetracking measures of performance on the Traveling Salesperson Problem" (2025). Undergraduate Honors Theses. 146.
https://digital.sandiego.edu/honors_theses/146
Copyright
Copyright held by the author
Included in
Cognition and Perception Commons, Cognitive Psychology Commons, Experimental Analysis of Behavior Commons