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Spatial Cognition

All articles tagged with #spatial cognition

Compass-first language: Guugu Yimithirr uses cardinal directions instead of left or right
science4 days ago

Compass-first language: Guugu Yimithirr uses cardinal directions instead of left or right

Guugu Yimithirr, spoken in northern Queensland, describes space using cardinal directions (north, south, east, west) instead of left/right, a system that remains constant as one moves and even appears in memory. Related Cape York languages like Kuuk Thaayorre share this absolute-frame pattern, fueling ongoing discussion about whether language shapes thought or simply reflects cultural practice; researchers emphasize careful interpretation and note revitalization pressures on these languages.

Octopuses Learn to Find Hidden Food Using Mirrors, Hinting at Mental Maps
science1 month ago

Octopuses Learn to Find Hidden Food Using Mirrors, Hinting at Mental Maps

Researchers trained three California two-spot octopuses to use a mirror to locate a crab placed behind them. After about 10–12 training trials, the octopuses learned to approach the real prey instead of its reflection; in testing they chose the correct location 73% of the time, suggesting they understood the mirror’s spatial information rather than just memorizing cues. The findings imply octopuses may have internal spatial maps and point to convergent evolution of cognition in distant relatives.