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Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

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Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans
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Page 1: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Children Getting Lost:Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans

Page 2: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Spatial Re-orientation Human adults re-orient using both spatial and

non-spatial cues Young children and animals are limited to

spatial cues Hypothesis: Use of non-spatial cues is

causally linked to the development of language production abilities

Language production ability > Non-spatial reorientation ability

Page 3: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Testing Rats (Cheng, 1996) Foraging task - 3 hidden food locations

specified by odors and varying brightness throughout the cage

Cage rotated to misalign with rat’s orientation

Page 4: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Testing Rats (Cheng, 1986)

Page 5: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Testing Rats (Cheng 1996) Contrary to expectations, rats relied on

the 3D geometry of the cage, but NOT “non-geometric clues”

Conclusion: adult rats rely strictly on geometry for reorientation tasks

Page 6: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Hermer and Spelke (1994, 1996) test human reorientation

Page 7: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Adult search results Child search results

- Adult subjects utilize both geometric and non-geometric clues for reorientation

- Children utilize only geometric clues for reorientation

Page 8: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 1 Designed to determine:

At what age children being performing like adults in reorientation tasks

Which cognitive mechanism(s) enable adult reorientation abilities

Page 9: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 1 Prior knowledge: first purpose of this

experiment was thus to confirm that children of 3-4 years of age would fail to conjoin geometric and non-geometric information to solve this task

to test whether subjects who rely on non-geometric information in this task are truly reorienting using that information (like the rats in previous experiments)

Page 10: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 1 - Purpose Prove that children aged 3-4 years will fail to

use both geometric and non-geometric clues to solve task

Prove that older children would combine clues to solve task, similar to human adults and different from young children/adult rats

Determine the age at which children use a blue wall as a landmark for direct spatial memory

Page 11: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 1 - Task 8 males, 8 females between 3-4 years old 10 males, 5 females ages 5-6 Subjects are tested in a rectangular chamber

with no windows or sources of noise White noise generator Overhead camera Child gets to choose a toy to search for in this

‘game’

Page 12: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 1 - Design/Results Design

Direct Landmark condition: object hidden behind fabric in a corner, child spun 5 times with eyes covered and told to search for toy

Variable: one test uses blue was as a DIRECT clue to the object’s location, an INDIRECT clue for the other test

Results: Older subjects tended to search the absolutely correct

corner Children searched geometrically appropriate locations

Page 13: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 1 - Results

3-4 yrs., direct5.5-6.5 yrs., indirect

3-4 yrs., indirect5.5-6.5 yrs., direct

Page 14: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 1 - Discussion Children were strikingly successful at using

non-geometric (i.e. the blue wall) information to locate a hidden object in the Direct Landmark task

Color is being used in addition to ‘left, right, across from’ etc

Prior studies showed children 3-4 years perform like young kids or ADULT RATS

Transition occurs during ages 5 to 7

Page 15: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 1 - Discussion 2 groups of children put in reorientation

tasks, blue wall used as a direct cue and indirect clue

Children from 3 to 6.5 years of age consistently perceived and remembered the location of the blue wall and used its location to guide their search for the object

Page 16: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 2 Test for correlation of other skill development

with flexible reorientation Dependent variable: reorientation task

performance Independent variables: age, nonverbal

intelligence, digit span, spatial memory span, reorientation performance in all-white room, comprehension/production of “left-right” and “above/behind” phrases

Page 17: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Methodology 10 boys, 14 girls, mean age 5.8 years Reorientation task:

Page 18: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Language production task

Page 19: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Language comprehension task

Page 20: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Digit/serial visuospatial span task Repeat a number series Visuospatial:

Page 21: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Reorientation task results

All white room One red wall

Page 22: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Reorientation task results

Page 23: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 3 Correlation between mind and spoken

language To determine if children exhibit a search

pattern similar to adult rats Requires a combination of landmark and

sense information Subjects also gave language production trials Children ages 6-7 years (paid of course)

Page 24: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 3 Circle of 9 plastic cups with a dwarf statue as

an inherent landmark Child watches object become hidden in cup to

landmark’s right Child’s eyes + ears covered, toy AND

landmark are moved Children expected to show ability similar to

adults rats to confine their search to the cups nearest the landmark

Page 25: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 3

- Subjects are told: `He [the dwarf] likes to play a game in which you and he go into a room together, a toy is hidden, your eyes and ears are covered, and then you have to find the toy.'- After the toy is moved, the experimenter says, `Where's the toy? Go get it', and recorded the subject's subsequent search

Page 26: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 3 - Results The subjects did NOT search randomly for the

object, and searched in the correct location more often than not

The 2 locations on either side of the dwarf after being moved were searched more frequently

Subjects learned to confine searches to locations next to the landmark

Resembled adults rats who searched for hidden food in proximal regions to a movable landmark array (Biegler and Morris, 1993, 1996)

Page 27: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Experiment 3 - Results Error: not enough information was

gained to link language production capabilities in question with several subjects, who did not show an ability to search a location above chance

Human adults suggest LR production plays a role in moving object searches

Page 28: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Conclusions Previous experiments (Hermer-Vzquez

et al., 1999) have shown that verbal interference impairs reorientation in adults Interference = “verbal shadowing”

Page 29: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Conclusions Verbal abilities may increase speed,

efficiency, and combination of other skills

Page 30: Children Getting Lost: Language, space, and the development of cognitive flexibility in humans.

Problems Failure to reproduce correlation

between LR production and performance in experiment 3 gives cause for doubt

Extremely small sample sizes Failure to clearly account for LR and

spatial differences


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