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Ishikawa, Toru; Zhou, Yiren – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2020
The skill of spatial learning and orientation is fundamental in humans and differs widely among individuals. Despite its importance, however, the malleability of this skill through practice has scarcely been studied empirically, in contrast to psychometric spatial ability. Thus, this article examines the possibility of improving the accuracy of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Mapping, Navigation, Spatial Ability, Skill Development
Matlen, Bryan J.; Gentner, Dedre; Franconeri, Steven L. – Grantee Submission, 2020
Humans have a uniquely sophisticated ability to see past superficial features and to understand the relational structure of the world around us. This ability often requires that we compare structures, finding commonalities and differences across visual depictions that are arranged in space, such as maps, graphs, or diagrams. Although such visual…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Teaching Methods
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Schmidt-Hönig, Kerstin; Pröbstl, Gerlinde – Discourse and Communication for Sustainable Education, 2020
How can we succeed in meeting the challenges of the future world in the best possible way? In order to support children in their development into optimistic, self-effective adults, it is necessary to find out how children perceive their world and how they combine these perceptions with their cognitive knowledge. This article examines the question…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Environmental Education, Futures (of Society), Elementary School Students
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Marshall, Julia – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2007
"Art practice as research" casts artmaking as inquiry--as a particularly experiential and constructivist process of learning in which imaginative synthesis and creative image making are ways of constructing knowledge. This article explores how artmaking functions as research through the creation of visual images, especially images that picture…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Expression, Research, Visual Arts
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Matthews, M. H. – Educational Psychology, 1987
Reports a study designed to investigate the effects of gender upon the acquisition of spatial and environmental skills among primary grade children. Results showed boys performed better on complex tasks and lend support to those who argue that more extensive movements of boys through the environment leads to superior spatial ability. (Author/JDH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Mapping, Early Childhood Education, Geography, Perceptual Development
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Clump, Michael A. – College Student Journal, 2005
Individuals' mental maps of the world are highly misrepresentative of the actual world. Availability in memory partly explains the reasons for this misrepresentation. When asked to place the 50 states in their correct locations, students have difficulty with states not in close proximity to their own because of availability, such that the…
Descriptors: Proximity, Misconceptions, Locational Skills (Social Studies), Memory
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Jacobsen, Terri Lomenick; Waters, Harriet Salatas – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1985
Second- and fourth-grade children viewed a cylindrical object in nine positions and identified the 90- , 180- , or 270-degree positions from a set of photographs. Perspectives in which the object differed from the child's view in both left-right and near-far dimensions were more difficult than perspectives that only transformed one dimension.…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Mapping, Developmental Stages, Distance
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Huertas, J. A.; Ochaita, E. – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 1992
Forty blind children and adolescents had to learn two unknown environments and then externalize the spatial representation via two methods--building a scale model and verbally estimating distances. High correlations were found between the two methods and between those methods and two systems of measuring mobility. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Blindness, Children, Cognitive Mapping
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Passini, R.; And Others – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 1988
Fifteen congenitally blind subjects were involved in a route-finding experiment in a complex architectural setting. Compared to sighted controls, subjects planned the journey in more detail, formulated more decisions, and used more units of information. On a cognitive mapping exercise, the blind subjects performed virtually as well as sighted…
Descriptors: Accessibility (for Disabled), Blindness, Building Design, Cognitive Mapping