Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2426675 Behavioural Processes 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
Three- to five-year-old children were trained to localize a sensor hidden underneath the floor, in the centre of a square-shaped enclosure (1.5 m × 1.5 m). Walking over the sensor caused a pleasant music to be played in the environment, thus engaging children in a playful spatial search. Children easily learned to find the centre of the training environment starting from random positions. After training, children were tested in enclosures of different size and/or shape: a larger square-shaped enclosure (3 m × 3 m), a rectangle-shaped enclosure (1.5 m × 3 m), an equilateral triangle-shaped enclosure (side 3 m) and an isosceles triangle-shaped enclosure (base 1.5 m; sides 3 m). Children searched in the central region of the enclosures, their precision varying as a function of the similarity of the testing enclosure's shape to the shape of the training enclosure. This suggests that a relational spatial strategy was used, and that it depended on the encoding of geometrical shape. This result highlights a distinctive role of the geometric centre of enclosed spaces in place learning in children, as already observed in nonhuman species.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
Authors
, ,