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Dillon, Moira R.; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Developmental Science, 2015
Research on animals, infants, children, and adults provides evidence that distinct cognitive systems underlie navigation and object recognition. Here we examine whether and how these systems interact when children interpret 2D edge-based perspectival line drawings of scenes and objects. Such drawings serve as symbols early in development, and they…
Descriptors: Geometry, Young Children, Visual Aids, Freehand Drawing
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Balcomb, Frances; Newcombe, Nora S.; Ferrara, Katrina – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2011
The relationship between emergent spatial understanding in different cognitive domains, including navigation and language, has rarely been studied using methods that allow for the examination of individual differences. In this study the authors explored emergent place learning and its relationship to early spatial language, namely prepositions, in…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Navigation, Orientation, Child Development
Owens, Kay – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2010
This paper collates some of the systematic ways that different cultural groups refer to space. In some cases, space is more strongly identified in terms of place than in school Indo-European mathematics approaches. The affinity to place does not reduce the efficient, abstract, mathematical system behind the reference but it does strengthen its…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mathematics Education, Mathematics Instruction, Maps
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Jansen-Osmann, Petra; Wiedenbauer, Gunnar – Environment and Behavior, 2004
Three experiments investigated the route-angularity effect, which is demonstrated when a greater number of turns along a route increases the estimated length. So far, a route-angularity effect has not been demonstrated in school-age children. Because of the lack of a developmental theory, this finding could only be explained by a minor control of…
Descriptors: Computation, Geographic Location, Cognitive Processes, Foreign Countries