Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Edward H. Cornell is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Edward H. Cornell.


Memory & Cognition | 1994

Place recognition and way finding by children and adults

Edward H. Cornell; C. Donald Heth; Denise M. Alberts

Children and adults were escorted on their first walk across our university campus and were periodically led off the original route during the return trip. During the return, we stopped prior to intersections on and off the original route to obtain estimates of place recognition accuracy and confidence. The subjects were then asked to point to the path that led back to the start and were corrected if wrong. Accuracy of place recognition was intermediate in a way-finding task requiring reversal of an incidentally learned novel route. However, accuracy increased as subjects were farther from the original route, indicating that the presence of novel landmarks boosted the discrimination of old and new places. Eight-year-old children were less accurate than 12-year-old children and 25-year-old adults, who did not differ in accuracy. There was a similar age difference in the ability to point to the direction to return when subjects correctly recognized that they were off route. The results are used to develop a model of way finding by place recognition.


Developmental Psychology | 1989

Children's wayfinding: response to instructions to use environmental landmarks

Edward H. Cornell; C. Donald Heth; Lorri S. Broda

The paths taken by 6- and 12-year-old children who were asked to lead the way back after their first walk across a university campus were recorded. Prior to the return, children were either uninformed of the requirement to lead the way back, generally informed, or shown specific near or far landmarks during the walk. The results suggest a prudent prescription for parents who are concerned about their childs independent travel: Specify route features where the child should continue or change heading


Annals of The Association of American Geographers | 2003

Human Sense of Direction and Wayfinding

Edward H. Cornell; Autumn Sorenson; Teresa Mio

Abstract One of the oldest beliefs about human wayfinding is that some people have a natural ability that distinguishes them from others. In four experiments, we asked adults to rate their own sense of direction, a promising index of orientation skills despite its simplicity and reliance on self-assessment. There were small to moderate correlations between self-ratings and accuracy of pointing to imagined landmarks, accuracy of path choices during a route reversal and detour, speed at executing shortcuts, and accuracy of choices of halls within a building complex. Although we did not find consistent gender differences in actual wayfinding, effects across experiments indicate that females rated their sense of direction as worse than males. Deliberations by females may have affected the speed of some of their performances. The results suggest that self-evaluation of sense of direction is associated with evaluation of ones familiarity with features of particular environments, as well as memories of successes and failures in recent wayfinding efforts.


Memory & Cognition | 1980

Distributed study facilitates infants’ delayed recognition memory

Edward H. Cornell

Infants of 5–6 months of age were tested for recognition of briefly presented photographs of faces. The interaction typically obtained with adults, a beneficial effect on retention due to the temporal spacing of study, was obtained with these infants. The results suggest that the distribution effect reflects a fundamental and automatic process of human memory.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning & Memory | 1979

Response versus place learning by human infants.

Edward H. Cornell; C. Donald Heth

Two cross-setional studies examined how infants learn the location of visual events. In Experiment 1, infants of 4, 8, and 12 mo of age learned to turn one way to view a novel pattern. In a subsequent transfer task, they were rotated to face the opposite side of the room. The 4-mo-old infants tended to err by repeating their previously learned response, but within 16-20 trials their performance was comparable to the higher levels maintained by the older infants. These results suggest that young infants learn the location of the pattern primarily in terms of response cues, whereas older infants employ both response cues and place cues. Experiment 2 was designed to independently assess the use of response cues and place cues by infants of 4, 8, 12, and 16 mo of age. All infants were able to rapidly learn and remember the location of the novel pattern when they were given response cues. There was a gradual emergence of place-cue use associated with age. It is suggested that the decrease in infant egocentricity in such spatial localization tasks may in fact reflect an age-related increase in the variety of reliable cues responded to by infants.


Memory & Cognition | 1983

Serial-position effects in infants’ recognition memory

Edward H. Cornell; Linda I. Bergstrom

Preverbal infants (7 months of age) were repeatedly shown a fixed series of photographs of adult female faces. The effects of the order of presentation of a photo (first, middle, or last) and the duration of retention (5 sec, 1 rain, or 5 rain) were subsequently assessed in a probe-recognition test. Both primacy and recency effects were obtained, but there was no evidence of recognition of the face that appeared in the middle of the series. There was also no evidence of recognition of the most recently studied face following the 5-rain retention interval. The bowed serial-position function and labile recency effect match those found in the performance of older subjects in classical verbal learning tasks, and we suggest an automatic process underlying these effects. Our explanation emphasizes differential learning and the context of the items to be remembered.


Environment and Behavior | 1984

Children's Acquisition of a Route via Different Media

Edward H. Cornell; Deborah H. Hay

Route learning by kindergarten and grade 2 children was assessed via a slide presentation, videotape, or walking the route with a guide. The children viewed the route only once, and were then asked to retrace it in the same medium from start to finish or in the reverse. They were shown a panoramic view at seven choice points along the route, and when retracing were asked to point to the correct path at these locations. Older children were less likely to err than younger children, reversing the route was more difficult than repeating it in the forward direction. There was very little difference in overall performance in slide and videotape media, but significantly fewer errors occurred while walking, especially when children were asked to indicate their way back to the start. Methodologically, these findings suggest caution should be exercised in generalizing from studies of childrens spatial performance using bounded planar materials. Theoretically, these findings support accounts of route learning that ascribe a fundamental role to self-produced exploration and its concurrent spatio-temporal feedback (e.g., Gibson, 1966,1979).


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 1983

Spatial cognition: Gathering strategies used by preschool children

Edward H. Cornell; C. Donald Heth

How preschool children retrieve hidden objects was examined in two cross-sectional studies. The first was a simple task in which 1- and 3-year-olds saw two treats hidden in their living room. The newly walking infants generally sought the closer treat first, providing evidence for a least-distance spatial strategy. However, this strategy was affected by a tendency to approach the hiding place most recently baited. Three-year-old children used a least-distance strategy regardless of the order of hidings. In Experiment 2, 3- and 5-year-olds saw 12 puzzle pieces hidden in various containers equally spaced within a naturally furnished childrens laboratory. Factors in addition to age were the distinctiveness of the containers and a requirement to return to the center of the array after each retrieval. Overall, children of both age groups were quite successful at this task, retrieving 11 of the pieces. However, 3-year-olds were less efficient, retrieving fewer pieces and requiring more searches. Detailed analyses of errors and patterns of choices indicated differential processes in achieving their performance. Three-year-old children showed the use of memories for events, discrimination of classes of hiding places, and efficient spatial biases. Five-year-old children were more likely to exhibit these processes concurrently.


Applied Cognitive Psychology | 1996

Serial Position Effects in Children's Route Reversal Errors: Implications for Police Search Operations

Edward H. Cornell; C. Donald Heth; Yvonne Kneubuhler; Sabena Sehgal

We illustrate how descriptions of way-finding behavior can be applied to the problem of searching for a lost child. We first establish a pattern of errors that children make when reversing a route. Eight- and 12-year-olds were escorted on a circular tour of a campus and then were asked to retrace the route from the end point to the beginning. Errors at intersections indicated that the original paths were more likely to be remembered at the beginning and end of the route than in the middle. Next, the obtained serial position effects were incorporated in an algorithm to estimate the probability that a child is within an area designated for search. The algorithm enhances the performance of a novice search manager in a simulation of an urban police search.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 1980

Three experiences affecting spatial discrimination learning by ambulatory children

C. Donald Heth; Edward H. Cornell

Abstract Children 1 and 3 years of age were given a two-choice spatial discrimination task. They were placed in front of a barrier and encouraged to walk around it; one route around the barrier was blocked. Three experiments studied the effects of different types of experience with this spatial problem. The first examined trial and error experience, in which the child was allowed to walk the route he or she had chosen. Although most children readily learned to choose the open route, the pattern of choices indicated that 3-year-olds were more likely to achieve a learning criterion after an error than 1-year-olds. A second experiment looked at the effects of showing the children the layout of the problem prior to trial and error experience. The 3-year-olds were again more likely than the 1-year-olds to achieve criterion after an error; furthermore, they were likely to know the correct route on the first trial. The third experiment let the children watch their parents take the correct route. This procedure eliminated age differences in performance. The initial choices of the 1-year-olds indicated that they were likely to know the correct route, and if they did not, they were just as likely to learn from their mistakes as the 3-year-olds. The data were interpreted within a mathematical model of learning. Based upon these analyses, we propose two developmental trends. One involves a growth in sensitivity to the consequences of a choice of route. The other is a progression from social learning to more independent and ideational methods of spatial problem solving.

Collaboration


Dive into the Edward H. Cornell's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge