Abstract
Building on earlier neuropsychological work, we adopted a novel individual differences approach to examine the relationship between spatial language and a wide range of both verbal and nonverbal abilities. Three new measures were developed for the assessment of spatial language processing: spatial naming, spatial verbal memory, and verbal comprehension in spatial perspective taking. Results from a sample of young adults revealed significant correlations between performance on the spatial language tasks and performance on both the analogous (non-spatial) verbal measures as well as on the (non-verbal) visual-spatial measures. Visual-spatial abilities, however, were more predictive of spatial language processing than verbal abilities. Furthermore, results from a sample of older adults revealed impairments in visual-spatial tasks and on spatial verbal memory. The results support dual process accounts of meaning, and provide further evidence of the close connection between the language of space and non-linguistic visual-spatial cognition.
Original language | English |
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Publication status | Published - 2015 |
Event | COGSCI 2015: The Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society - Pasadena, United States Duration: 23 Jul 2015 → 25 Jul 2015 |
Conference
Conference | COGSCI 2015: The Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society |
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Country/Territory | United States |
City | Pasadena |
Period | 23/07/15 → 25/07/15 |
Profiles
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Kenny Coventry
- School of Psychology - Professor of Psychology
- ClimateUEA - Member
- HealthUEA - Steering Committee Member
Person: Member, Research Group Member, Academic, Teaching & Research
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Chris Fox
- Norwich Medical School - Honorary Professor
- Institute for Volunteering Research - Member
- Norwich Epidemiology Centre - Member
- Mental Health - Member
Person: Honorary, Research Group Member, Research Centre Member