Loewenstein Jeffrey, Gentner Dedre
University of Texas at Austin, USA.
Cogn Psychol. 2005 Jun;50(4):315-53. doi: 10.1016/j.cogpsych.2004.09.004. Epub 2005 Jan 11.
We test the claim that learning and using language for spatial relations can influence spatial representation and reasoning. Preschool children were given a mapping task in which they were asked to find a "winner" placed in a three-tiered box after seeing one placed in a virtually identical box. The correct choice was determined by finding the corresponding relative location in the test box, making it a difficult task for preschool children. We found that hearing language for spatial relations facilitated children's mapping performance. We found effects at younger ages on easier tasks (Experiments 1 and 2) and at older ages on harder tasks (Experiment 3). The effects of spatial relational language differed predictably according to the semantics of the terms children heard (Experiment 4). Finally, the effects of spatial language were maintained over time (Experiment 5): children given one initial exposure to the spatial terms maintained their advantage over baseline children when they again carried out the mapping task 2 days later, with no further exposure to the spatial terms. The evidence is consistent with the explanation that language bolsters children's spatial encodings, which in turn supports their mapping performance.
我们对学习和使用表示空间关系的语言会影响空间表征和推理这一说法进行了测试。我们让学龄前儿童完成一项映射任务,在他们看到一个“赢家”被放置在一个几乎相同的盒子里后,要求他们在一个三层盒子里找到这个“赢家”。正确的选择是通过在测试盒子中找到相应的相对位置来确定的,这对学龄前儿童来说是一项困难的任务。我们发现,听到表示空间关系的语言有助于儿童的映射表现。我们发现在较年幼的儿童中,这种影响体现在较简单的任务上(实验1和实验2);而在较大的儿童中,这种影响体现在较难的任务上(实验3)。根据儿童听到的术语的语义,空间关系语言的影响呈现出可预测的差异(实验4)。最后,空间语言的影响会随着时间保持(实验5):最初接触过空间术语的儿童在两天后再次进行映射任务时,相较于未接触过空间术语的基准儿童,仍保持着优势,且在此期间没有再次接触空间术语。这一证据与语言增强儿童空间编码的解释相一致,而空间编码反过来又支持他们的映射表现。