Coutrot, A., Silva, R., Manley, E., de Cothi, W., Sami, S, Bohbot, V.D., Wiener, J.M., Hölscher, C., Dalton, R.C., Hornberger, M. and Spiers, H.J., 2018. Global Determinants of Navigation Ability. Current Biology, 28 (17), 2861-2866.
Full text available as:
|
PDF
manuscript_final_for_repository.pdf - Accepted Version Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives. 9MB | |
Copyright to original material in this document is with the original owner(s). Access to this content through BURO is granted on condition that you use it only for research, scholarly or other non-commercial purposes. If you wish to use it for any other purposes, you must contact BU via BURO@bournemouth.ac.uk. Any third party copyright material in this document remains the property of its respective owner(s). BU grants no licence for further use of that third party material. |
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.06.009
Abstract
Human spatial ability is modulated by a number of factors, including age [1-3] and gender [4, 5]. Although a few studies showed that culture influences cognitive strategies [6-13], the interaction between these factors has never been globally assessed as this requires testing millions of people of all ages across many different countries in the world. Since countries vary in their geographical and cultural properties, we predicted that these variations give rise to an organized spatial distribution of cognition at a planetary-wide scale. To test this hypothesis, we developed a mobile-app-based cognitive task, measuring non-verbal spatial navigation ability in more than 2.5 million people and sampling populations in every nation state. We focused on spatial navigation due to its universal requirement across cultures. Using a clustering approach, we find that navigation ability is clustered into five distinct, yet geographically related, groups of countries. Specifically, the economic wealth of a nation was predictive of the average navigation ability of its inhabitants, and gender inequality was predictive of the size of performance difference between males and females. Thus, cognitive abilities, at least for spatial navigation, are clustered according to economic wealth and gender inequalities globally, which has significant implications for cross-cultural studies and multi-center clinical trials using cognitive testing.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
ISSN: | 0960-9822 |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | aging ; cross-country analysis ; crowdsourcing ; gender differences ; spatial cognition |
Group: | Faculty of Science & Technology |
ID Code: | 31134 |
Deposited By: | Symplectic RT2 |
Deposited On: | 17 Aug 2018 11:22 |
Last Modified: | 14 Mar 2022 14:12 |
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year
Repository Staff Only - |