Demonstrations of cognitive competence in preschool children and infants played an important role in the waning influence of Piagetian theory and the rise of nativism. Arguments and data favoring modularity have further buttressed the case for nativism. This article reviews evidence concerning early competence and modularity in the spatial and quantitative domains, as well as the role of experience in development. This evidence provides little reason to support nativist claims in either domain.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
AdolphK.E. (2000). Specificity of learning: Why infants fall over a veritable cliff. Psychological Science, 11, 290–295.
2.
BerkL.E. (2002). Infants, children and adolescents (4th ed.). Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
3.
BogartzR.S.ShinskeyJ.L.SpeakerL.J. (1997). Interpreting infant looking: The event set * event set design. Developmental Psychology, 33, 408–422.
4.
BushnellE.W.McKenzieB.E.LawrenceD.A.ConnellS. (1995). The spatial coding strategies of one-year-old infants in a locomotor search task. Child Development, 66, 937–958.
5.
CamposJ.J.AndersonD.I.Barbu-RothM.A.HubbardE.M.HertensteinM.J.WitheringtonD. (2000). Travel broadens the mind. Infancy, 1, 149–219.
6.
ClearfieldM.W. (2001, May). The role of locomotor experience in the development of navigational memory. Paper presented at the First World Congress on Motor Development and Learning in Infancy: Behavioral, Neurological and Modeling Issues, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
7.
ClearfieldM.W.MixK.S. (1999). Number versus contour length in infants' discrimination of small visual sets. Psychological Science, 10, 408–411.
8.
ClearfieldM.W.MixK.S. (2001). Amount versus number: Infants' use of area and contour length to discriminate small sets. Journal of Cognition and Development, 2, 243–260.
9.
DehaeneS. (1997). The number sense: How the mind creates mathematics. New York: Oxford University Press.
10.
ElmanJ.BatesE.JohnsonM.Karmiloff-SmithA.ParisiD.PlunkettK. (1996). Rethinking innateness: A connectionist perspective on development. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
11.
FeigensonL.CareyS.HauserM. (2002). The representations underlying infants' choice of more: Object files versus analog magnitudes. Psychological Science, 13, 150–156.
12.
FeigensonL.CareyS.SpelkeE. (in press). Infants' discrimination of number and spatial extent. Cognitive Psychology.
13.
FodorJ.A. (1983). Modularity of mind: An essay on faculty psychology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
14.
GaoF.LevineS.C.HuttenlocherJ. (2000). What do infants know about continuous quantity?Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 77, 20–29.
15.
GelmanR. (1972). Logical capacity of very young children: Number invariance rules. Child Development, 43, 75–90.
16.
GopnikA.MeltzoffA.N. (1997). Words, thoughts, and theories. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
17.
GreenoughW.BlackJ.WallaceC. (1988). Experience and brain development. Child Development, 58, 539–559.
18.
HaithM.M.BensonJ.B. (1998). Infant cognition. In KuhnD.SieglerR., (Eds.), Handbook of child psychology: Cognition, perception and language (Vol. 2, pp. 199–254). New York: John Wiley.
19.
HermerL.SpelkeE. (1994). A geometric process for spatial reorientation in young children. Nature, 370, 57–59.
20.
HermerL.SpelkeE. (1996). Modularity and development: A case of spatial reorientation. Cognition, 61, 195–232.
21.
Huntley-FennerG.CannonE. (2000). Preschoolers' magnitude comparisons are mediated by a preverbal analog mechanism. Psychological Science, 11, 147–152.
22.
HuttenlocherJ.JordanN.C.LevineS.C. (1994). A mental model for early arithmetic. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 123, 284–296.
23.
HuttenlocherJ.NewcombeN.SandbergE.H. (1994). The coding of spatial location in young children. Cognitive Psychology, 27, 115–148.
24.
HuttenlocherJ.NewcombeN.VasilyevaM. (1999). Spatial scaling in young children. Psychological Science, 10, 393–398.
25.
Karmiloff-SmithA. (1992). Beyond modularity: A developmental perspective on cognitive science. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
26.
LearmonthA.E.NadelL.NewcombeN.S. (2002). Children's use of landmarks: Implications for modularity theory. Psychological Science, 13, 337–341.
27.
LearmonthA.E.NewcombeN.HuttenlocherJ. (2001). Toddlers' use of metric information and landmarks to reorient. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 80, 225–244.
28.
LeslieA.M. (1987). Pretense and representation: The origins of “theory of mind.”Psychological Review, 94, 412–426.
29.
MaurerD.LewisT.L.BrentH.P.LevinA.V. (1999). Rapid improvement in the acuity of infants after visual input. Science, 286, 108–110.
30.
MixK.S. (1999). Preschoolers' recognition of numerical equivalence: Sequential sets. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 74, 309–332.
31.
MixK.S.HuttenlocherJ.LevineS.C. (1996). Do preschool children recognize auditory-visual numerical correspondences?Child Development, 67, 1592–1608.
32.
MixK.S.HuttenlocherJ.LevineS.C. (2002). Quantitative development in infancy and early childhood. New York: Oxford University Press.
33.
MixK.S.LevineS.C.HuttenlocherJ. (1997). Numerical abstraction in infants: Another look. Developmental Psychology, 33, 423–428.
34.
MixK.S.LevineS.C.HuttenlocherJ. (1999). Early fraction calculation ability. Developmental Psychology, 35, 164–174.
35.
MooreD.BenensonJ.ReznickJ.S.PetersonM.KaganJ. (1987). Effect of auditory numerical information on infants' looking behavior: Contradictory evidence. Developmental Psychology, 23, 665–670.
36.
NadelL. (1990). Varieties of spatial cognition: Psychological considerations. In DiamondA., (Ed.), The development and neural basis of higher cognitive functions (pp. 613–636). New York: New York Academy of Sciences.
37.
NeedhamA. (2000). Improvements in object exploration skills may facilitate the development of object segregation in early infancy. Journal of Cognition and Development, 1, 131–156.
38.
NewcombeN. (1989). Development of spatial perspective taking. In ReeseH.W., (Ed.), Advances in child development and behavior (Vol. 22, pp. 203–247). San Diego, CA: Academic Press.
39.
NewcombeN.HuttenlocherJ. (1992). Children's early ability to solve perspective-taking problems. Developmental Psychology, 28, 635–643.
40.
NewcombeN.HuttenlocherJ. (2000). Making space: The development of spatial representation and reasoning. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
41.
NewcombeN.HuttenlocherJ.DrummeyA.WileyJ. (1998). The development of spatial location coding: Place learning and dead reckoning in the second and third years. Cognitive Development, 13, 185–200.
42.
NewcombeN.HuttenlocherJ.LearmonthA. (1999). Infants' coding of location in continuous space. Infant Behavior and Development, 22, 483–510.
43.
OvermanW.H.PateB.J.MooreK.PeusterA. (1996). Ontogeny of place learning in children as measured in the Radial Arm Maze, Morris Search Task, and Open Field Task. Behavioral Neuroscience, 110, 1205–1228.
44.
PiagetJ.InhelderB. (1967). The child's conception of space. New York: Norton. (Original work published 1948)
45.
RieserJ.J.LockmanJ.PickH.L. (1980). The role of visual experience in knowledge of spatial layout. Perception & Psychophysics, 28, 185–190.
46.
RogoffB. (1990). Apprenticeship in thinking: Cognitive development in social context. New York: Oxford University Press.
47.
SieglerR.S. (1996). Emerging minds: The process of change in children's thinking. New York: Oxford University Press.
48.
SimonT.J. (1997). Reconceptualizing the origins of number knowledge: A non-numerical account. Cognitive Development, 12, 349–372.
49.
SimonT.J. (1999). The foundations of numerical thinking in a brain without numbers. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 3, 363–364.
50.
SophianC. (1997). Beyond competence: The significance of performance for conceptual development. Cognitive Development, 12, 281–303.
51.
SophianC. (2000). Perceptions of proportionality in young children: Matching spatial ratios. Cognition, 75, 145–170.
52.
SpelkeE.DehaeneS. (1999). Biological foundations of numerical thinking: Response to T.J. Simon. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 3, 365–366.
53.
SpelkeE.S.NewportE.L. (1998). Nativism, empiricism, and the growth of knowledge. In LernerR.M., (Ed.), Handbook of child psychology: Vol. 1. Theoretical models of human development (5th ed., pp. 275–340). New York: John Wiley.
54.
StarkeyP.CooperR.G. (1980). Perception of numbers by human infants. Science, 210, 1033–1035.
55.
StarkeyP.SpelkeE.GelmanR. (1990). Numerical abstraction by human infants. Cognition, 36, 97–127.
56.
StraussM.S.CurtisL.E. (1981). Infant perception of numerosity. Child Development, 52, 1146–1152.
57.
WynnK. (1992). Addition and subtraction by human infants. Nature, 27, 749–750.
58.
WynnK. (2000, July). Numerical cognition in infants: Arguments for a dedicated number mechanism and against alternative proposals. Paper presented at the International Conference on Infant Studies, Brighton, England.