Title of article :
Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans: the case of two spatial memory tasks
Author/Authors :
Linda Hermer-Vazquez، نويسنده , , Linda and Moffet، نويسنده , , Anne and Munkholm، نويسنده , , Paul، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages :
37
From page :
263
To page :
299
Abstract :
Prior experiments have shown that young children, like adult rats, rely mainly on information about the macroscopic shape of the environment to reorient themselves, whereas human adults rely more flexibly on combinations of spatial and non-spatial landmark information. Adult rats have also been shown to exhibit a striking limitation in another spatial memory task, movable object search, again a limitation not shown by human adults. The present experiments explored the developmental change in humans leading to more flexible, human adult-like performance on these two tasks. Experiment 1 identified the age range of 5–7 years as the time the developmental change for reorientation occurs. Experiment 2 employed a multiple regression approach to determine that among several candidate measures, only a specific language production measure, the production of phrases specifying exactly the information needed to solve the task like adults, correlated with the reorientation performance of children in this age range. Experiment 3 revealed that similar language production abilities were associated with more flexible moving object search task performance. These results, in combination with findings with human adults, suggest that language production skills play a causal role in allowing older humans to construct novel representations rapidly, which can then be used to transcend the limits of phylogenetically older cognitive processes.
Keywords :
Humans , Spatial memory tasks , Cognitive flexibility , Language , Space
Journal title :
Cognition
Serial Year :
2001
Journal title :
Cognition
Record number :
2075475
Link To Document :
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