| Literature DB >> 30984092 |
Pierpaolo Sorrentino1, Anna Lardone2, Matteo Pesoli2, Marianna Liparoti2, Simone Montuori2, Giuseppe Curcio3, Giuseppe Sorrentino2,4,5, Laura Mandolesi6, Francesca Foti7.
Abstract
The present study is aimed at investigating the development of spatial memory in pre-school children aged 4-6 years using an ecological walking task with multiple rewards. The participants were to explore an open space in order to find nine rewards placed in buckets arranged in three spatial configurations: a Cross, a 3 × 3 Matrix, and a Cluster composed of three groups of three buckets each. Clear age-related improvements were evident in all the parameters analyzed. In fact, there was a general trend for younger children to display worse performance than the older ones. Moreover, males performed better than females in both the search efficiency and visiting all buckets. Additionally, the search efficiency proved to be a function of the difficulty of the configuration to be explored: the Matrix and Cluster configurations were easier to explore than the Cross configuration. Taken altogether, the present findings suggest that there is a general improvement in the spatial memory abilities in preschoolers and that solving an open space task could be influenced by gender. Moreover, it can be proposed that both the procedural competences and the memory load requested to explore a specific environment are determined by its specific features.Entities:
Keywords: behavioral task; children; cognitive map; spatial exploration; spatial memory
Year: 2019 PMID: 30984092 PMCID: PMC6450422 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00728
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Performances of group I and group II on the search task in Matrix, Cluster, and Cross configurations. Bucket arrangement in the three configurations is depicted in the figures below the graphs (A,B,C). Data are presented as mean ± SEM. Asterisks and the p values inside the graphs (A,C) indicate the significance level of post hoc comparisons on the second-order interactions: ***p < 0.0005. The p values of the main factors are reported on the right side of each graph.
Figure 2Performances of group I and group II on the search task in Matrix, Cluster, and Cross configurations. Bucket arrangement in the three configurations is depicted in the figures below the graphs. Data are presented as mean ± SEM (A,B,C). The p values inside the graph (C) indicate the significance level of post hoc comparisons on the second-order interaction. The p values of the main factors are reported on the right side of each graph.
Figure 3(A) Total distance of group I and group II travelled to complete the task in Matrix, Cluster, and Cross configurations. Data are presented as mean ± SEM. (B) Trajectories traveled by all children of each group are depicted.
Figure 4Selected drawings of group I and group II. At the end of each configuration, the children were required to draw the setting they had just experienced.