Travel Broadens the Mind
Top Cited Papers
- 1 April 2000
- Vol. 1 (2) , 149-219
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327078in0102_1
Abstract
The onset of locomotion heralds one of the major life transitions in early development and involves a pervasive set of changes in perception, spatial cognition, and social and emotional development. Through a synthesis of published and hitherto unpublished findings, gathered from a number of converging research designs and methods, this article provides a comprehensive review and reanalysis of the consequences of self‐produced locomotor experience. Specifically, we focus on the role of locomotor experience in changes in social and emotional development, referential gestural communication, wariness of heights, the perception of self‐motion, distance perception, spatial search, and spatial coding strategies. Our analysis reveals new insights into the specific processes by which locomotor experience brings about psychological changes. We elaborate these processes and provide new predictions about previously unsuspected links between locomotor experience and psychological function. The research we describe is relevant to our broad understanding of the developmental process, particularly as it pertains to developmental transitions. Although acknowledging the role of genetically mediated developmental changes, our viewpoint is a transactional one in which a single acquisition, in this case the onset of locomotion, sets in motion a family of experiences and processes that in turn mobilize both broad‐based and context‐specific psychological reorganizations. We conclude that, in infancy, the onset of locomotor experience brings about widespread consequences, and after infancy, can be responsible for an enduring role in development by maintaining and updating existing skills.Keywords
This publication has 94 references indexed in Scilit:
- Different Bodies, Different MindsCurrent Directions in Psychological Science, 2011
- Going Somewhere: An Ecological and Experimental Approach to Development of MobilityEcological Psychology, 1989
- Four-Month-Old Infants' Sensitivity to Binocular and Kinetic Information for Three-Dimensional-Object ShapeChild Development, 1987
- Binocular vision and spatial perception on 4- and 5-month-old infants.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1986
- Object tracking and search in infancy: A review of data and a theoretical evaluation*1Developmental Review, 1985
- Effects of the ability to locomote on infants' social and exploratory behaviors: An experimental study.Developmental Psychology, 1984
- Localization of events in space: Young infants are not always egocentricBritish Journal of Developmental Psychology, 1984
- Development of visual size constancy during the 1st year of human infancy.Developmental Psychology, 1980
- Spatial Orientation of Six-Month-Old InfantsChild Development, 1979
- Laboratory versus home: The effect of environment on the 9-month-old infant's choice of spatial reference system.Developmental Psychology, 1979