Department of Psychology, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT 06459, United States.
Cognition. 2011 Aug;120(2):186-201. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2011.04.004. Epub 2011 Jun 12.
Language has been linked to spatial representation and behavior in humans, but the nature of this effect is debated. Here, we test whether simple verbal expressions improve 4-year-old children's performance in a disoriented search task in a small rectangular room with a single red landmark wall. Disoriented children's landmark-guided search for a hidden object was dramatically enhanced when the experimenter used certain verbal expressions to designate the landmark during the hiding event. Both a spatial expression ("I'm hiding the sticker at the red/white wall") and a non-spatial but task-relevant expression ("The red/white wall can help you get the sticker") enhanced children's search, relative to uncued controls. By contrast, a verbal expression that drew attention to the landmark in a task-irrelevant manner ("Look at this pretty red/white wall") produced no such enhancement. These findings provide further evidence that language changes spatial behavior in children and illuminate one mechanism through which language exerts its effect: by helping children understand the relevance of landmarks for encoding locations.
语言与人类的空间表现和行为有关,但这种影响的性质存在争议。在这里,我们测试了简单的口头表达是否能提高 4 岁儿童在一个有一个红色地标墙的小矩形房间里迷失方向的搜索任务中的表现。当实验者在隐藏事件中使用某些口头表达来指定地标时,迷失方向的儿童在地标引导下寻找隐藏物体的表现有了显著提高。与无提示对照组相比,空间表达(“我把贴纸藏在红白相间的墙上”)和非空间但与任务相关的表达(“红白相间的墙可以帮助你找到贴纸”)都增强了儿童的搜索能力。相比之下,以与任务无关的方式引起对地标注意的口头表达(“看这面漂亮的红白相间的墙”)则没有产生这种增强效果。这些发现进一步证明了语言会改变儿童的空间行为,并揭示了语言产生影响的一种机制:通过帮助儿童理解地标对编码位置的相关性。