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Lee, Sang Ah; Sovrano, Valeria A.; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Cognition, 2012
Geometry is one of the highest achievements of our species, but its foundations are obscure. Consistent with longstanding suggestions that geometrical knowledge is rooted in processes guiding navigation, the present study examines potential sources of geometrical knowledge in the navigation processes by which young children establish their sense…
Descriptors: Young Children, Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Spatial Ability
Shusterman, Anna; Ah Lee, Sang; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Cognition, 2011
Language has been linked to spatial representation and behavior in humans, but the nature of this effect is debated. Here, we test whether simple verbal expressions improve 4-year-old children's performance in a disoriented search task in a small rectangular room with a single red landmark wall. Disoriented children's landmark-guided search for a…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Navigation, Verbal Communication, Spatial Ability
Spelke, Elizabeth S.; Gilmore, Camilla K.; McCarthy, Shannon – Developmental Science, 2011
Geometrical concepts are critical to a host of human cognitive achievements, from maps to measurement to mathematics, and both the development of these concepts, and their variation by gender, have long been studied. Most studies of geometrical reasoning, however, present children with materials containing both geometric and non-geometric…
Descriptors: Maps, Kindergarten, Geometric Concepts, Geometry
Xu, Fei; Spelke, Elizabeth S.; Goddard, Sydney – Developmental Science, 2005
Four experiments used a preferential looking method to investigate 6-month-old infants' capacity to represent numerosity in visual-spatial displays. Building on previous findings that such infants discriminate between arrays of eight versus 16 discs, but not eight versus 12 discs (Xu & Spelke, 2000), Experiments 1 and 2 investigated whether…
Descriptors: Infants, Numeracy, Visual Stimuli, Task Analysis
Spelke, Elizabeth S. – American Psychologist, 2005
This article considers 3 claims that cognitive sex differences account for the differential representation of men and women in high-level careers in mathematics and science: (a) males are more focused on objects from the beginning of life and therefore are predisposed to better learning about mechanical systems; (b) males have a profile of spatial…
Descriptors: Females, Cognitive Ability, Males, Cognitive Development