Litcius/Paper detail

Building a Cognitive Science of Human Variation: Individual Differences in Spatial Navigation

Nora S. Newcombe, Mary Hegarty, David H. Uttal

2022Topics in Cognitive Science50 citationsDOI

Abstract

The aim of this issue is to take stock of cognitive science of human variation in the field of spatial navigation, an important domain in which debates have often assumed an invariant human mind. Addressing the challenge of individual differences requires cognitive scientists to change their practices in several ways. First, we need to consider how to design measures and paradigms that have adequate psychometric characteristics. Second, using reliable, efficient, and valid measures, we need to examine how people vary from time to time, both in the short run due to emotions, such as stress or time pressure, and in the longer run, due to training or living in physical environments that require wayfinding skills. Third, we need to study people different from the traditional college participants, including variations in age, gender, education, culture, physical environment, and possible interactions among these variables.

Topics & Concepts

Variation (astronomy)CognitionCognitive psychologySpatial abilitySpatial cognitionSpatial variabilityPsychologyComputer scienceCognitive scienceArtificial intelligenceStatisticsMathematicsNeuroscienceAstrophysicsPhysicsSpatial Cognition and NavigationCategorization, perception, and languageGeographic Information Systems Studies