Levine Susan C, Goldin-Meadow Susan, Carlson Matthew T, Hemani-Lopez Naureen
Department of Psychology, Department of Comparative Human Development and Committee on Education, University of Chicago.
Department of Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese and Center for Language Science, The Pennsylvania State University.
Cogn Sci. 2018 May;42(4):1207-1228. doi: 10.1111/cogs.12603. Epub 2018 Mar 12.
We examined the effects of three different training conditions, all of which involve the motor system, on kindergarteners' mental transformation skill. We focused on three main questions. First, we asked whether training that involves making a motor movement that is relevant to the mental transformation-either concretely through action (action training) or more abstractly through gestural movements that represent the action (move-gesture training)-resulted in greater gains than training using motor movements irrelevant to the mental transformation (point-gesture training). We tested children prior to training, immediately after training (posttest), and 1 week after training (retest), and we found greater improvement in mental transformation skill in both the action and move-gesture training conditions than in the point-gesture condition, at both posttest and retest. Second, we asked whether the total gain made by retest differed depending on the abstractness of the movement-relevant training (action vs. move-gesture), and we found that it did not. Finally, we asked whether the time course of improvement differed for the two movement-relevant conditions, and we found that it did-gains in the action condition were realized immediately at posttest, with no further gains at retest; gains in the move-gesture condition were realized throughout, with comparable gains from pretest-to-posttest and from posttest-to-retest. Training that involves movement, whether concrete or abstract, can thus benefit children's mental transformation skill. However, the benefits unfold differently over time-the benefits of concrete training unfold immediately after training (online learning); the benefits of more abstract training unfold in equal steps immediately after training (online learning) and during the intervening week with no additional training (offline learning). These findings have implications for the kinds of instruction that can best support spatial learning.
我们研究了三种不同训练条件(均涉及运动系统)对幼儿园儿童心理转换技能的影响。我们聚焦于三个主要问题。首先,我们探究涉及做出与心理转换相关的运动的训练——无论是具体通过动作(动作训练),还是更抽象地通过代表该动作的手势动作(移动手势训练)——是否比使用与心理转换无关的运动的训练(点手势训练)能带来更大的提升。我们在训练前、训练后立即(后测)以及训练后1周(重测)对儿童进行测试,发现在后测和重测时,动作训练和移动手势训练条件下的心理转换技能提升均大于点手势训练条件。其次,我们询问重测时的总体提升是否因与运动相关训练的抽象程度(动作与移动手势)而异,结果发现并非如此。最后,我们询问两种与运动相关的条件下提升的时间进程是否不同,结果发现确实不同——动作训练条件下的提升在测试后立即实现,重测时没有进一步提升;移动手势训练条件下的提升贯穿始终,从预测试到后测试以及从后测试到重测的提升相当。因此,涉及运动的训练,无论是具体的还是抽象的,都能使儿童的心理转换技能受益。然而,其益处随时间的呈现方式不同——具体训练的益处训练后立即显现(在线学习);更抽象训练的益处训练后立即(在线学习)以及在中间的一周无额外训练期间(离线学习)以相等的幅度显现。这些发现对最能支持空间学习的教学类型具有启示意义。