Clingan-Siverly Sam, Nelson Paige M, Göksun Tilbe, Demir-Lira Ö Ece
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Iowa, Iowa, IA, United States.
Department of Psychology, Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey.
Front Psychol. 2021 Apr 23;12:651678. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.651678. eCollection 2021.
Spatial skills predict important life outcomes, such as mathematical achievement or entrance into Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) disciplines. Children significantly vary in their spatial performance even before they enter formal schooling. One correlate of children's spatial performance is the spatial language they produce and hear from others, such as their parents. Because the emphasis has been on spatial language, less is known about the role of hand gestures in children's spatial development. Some children are more likely to fall behind in their spatial skills than others. Children born premature (gestational age <37 weeks) constitute such a risk group. Here, we compared performance of term and preterm-born children on two non-verbal spatial tasks-mental transformation and block design. We also examined relations of children's performance on these tasks to parental spatial language and gesture input and their own production of spatial language and gesture during an independent puzzle play interaction. We found that while term and preterm-born children ( = 40) as a group did not differ in the mental transformation or block design performance, children varied widely in their performance within each group. The variability in mental transformation scores was predicted by both a subset of spatial words ( aspects of spatial information) and all spatial gestures children produced. Children's spatial language and gesture were in turn related to their parents' spatial language and gesture. Parental spatial language and gesture had an indirect relation on children's mental transformation, but not block design, scores via children's spatial language, and gesture use. Overall, results highlight the unique contributions of speech and gesture in communicating spatial information and predicting children's spatial performance.
空间技能能预测重要的生活成果,比如数学成绩或进入科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)学科学习。儿童在进入正规学校教育之前,其空间表现就存在显著差异。儿童空间表现的一个相关因素是他们自己说出以及从他人(如父母)那里听到的空间语言。由于一直以来重点都在空间语言上,对于手势在儿童空间发展中的作用了解较少。有些儿童比其他儿童更有可能在空间技能方面落后。早产(胎龄<37周)的儿童就构成这样一个风险群体。在此,我们比较了足月儿和早产儿在两项非言语空间任务——心理旋转和积木设计上的表现。我们还考察了儿童在这些任务上的表现与父母的空间语言和手势输入之间的关系,以及在独立的拼图游戏互动中他们自己的空间语言和手势表达。我们发现,虽然足月儿和早产儿(n = 40)作为一个群体在心理旋转或积木设计表现上没有差异,但每个组内儿童的表现差异很大。心理旋转分数的变异性由一部分空间词汇(空间信息的各个方面)以及儿童做出的所有空间手势共同预测。儿童的空间语言和手势反过来又与他们父母的空间语言和手势相关。父母的空间语言和手势通过儿童的空间语言和手势使用,对儿童的心理旋转分数有间接影响,但对积木设计分数没有影响。总体而言,结果突出了言语和手势在传达空间信息以及预测儿童空间表现方面的独特贡献。