Literature DB >> 8990972

Modularity and development: the case of spatial reorientation.

L Hermer1, E Spelke.   

Abstract

In a series of experiments, young children who were disoriented in a novel environment reoriented themselves in accord with the large-scale shape of the environment but not in accord with nongeometric properties of the environment such as the color of a wall, the patterning on a box, or the categorical identity of an object. Because children's failure to reorient by nongeometric information cannot be attributed to limits on their ability to detect, remember, or use that information for other purposes, this failure suggests that children's reorientation, at least in relatively novel environments, depends on a mechanism that is informationally encapsulated and task-specific: two hallmarks of modular cognitive processes. Parallel studies with rats suggest that children share this mechanism with at least some adult nonhuman mammals. In contrast, our own studies of human adults, who readily solved our tasks by conjoining nongeometric and geometric information, indicated that the most striking limitations of this mechanism are overcome during human development. These findings support broader proposals concerning the domain specificity of humans' core cognitive abilities, the conservation of cognitive abilities across related species and over the course of human development, and the developmental processes by which core abilities are extended to permit more flexible, uniquely human kinds of problem solving.

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Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 8990972     DOI: 10.1016/s0010-0277(96)00714-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cognition        ISSN: 0010-0277


  76 in total

1.  Learning fine-grained and category information in navigable real-world space.

Authors:  David H Uttal; Alinda Friedman; Linda Liu Hand; Christopher Warren
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2010-12

Review 2.  Building a cognitive map by assembling multiple path integration systems.

Authors:  Ranxiao Frances Wang
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2016-06

3.  Geometric and featural systems, separable and combined: Evidence from reorientation in people with Williams syndrome.

Authors:  Katrina Ferrara; Barbara Landau
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2015-08-10

Review 4.  Is there a geometric module for spatial orientation? Squaring theory and evidence.

Authors:  Ken Cheng; Nora S Newcombe
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2005-02

5.  The reach-to-grasp-food task for rats: a rare case of modularity in animal behavior?

Authors:  Linda Hermer-Vazquez; Raymond Hermer-Vazquez; John K Chapin
Journal:  Behav Brain Res       Date:  2007-01-04       Impact factor: 3.332

Review 6.  Modern modularity and the road towards a modular psychiatry.

Authors:  Jürgen Zielasek; Wolfgang Gaebel
Journal:  Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci       Date:  2008-11       Impact factor: 5.270

7.  How habitat features shape ground squirrel (Urocitellus beldingi) navigation.

Authors:  Jason N Bruck; Jill M Mateo
Journal:  J Comp Psychol       Date:  2010-05       Impact factor: 2.231

8.  Core knowledge and the emergence of symbols: The case of maps.

Authors:  Yi Huang; Elizabeth S Spelke
Journal:  J Cogn Dev       Date:  2015-01

9.  The shape of human navigation: how environmental geometry is used in maintenance of spatial orientation.

Authors:  Jonathan W Kelly; Timothy P McNamara; Bobby Bodenheimer; Thomas H Carr; John J Rieser
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2008-10-25

10.  Two-year-old children interpret abstract, purely geometric maps.

Authors:  Nathan Winkler-Rhoades; Susan C Carey; Elizabeth S Spelke
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2013-05
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