TY - JOUR
T1 - Correlations between spatial skills
T2 - a test of the hunter-gatherer hypothesis
AU - Hughes, M. A.
AU - Sulikowski, D.
AU - Burke, D.
PY - 2014/3/1
Y1 - 2014/3/1
N2 - The hunter-gatherer hypothesis of SILVERMAN and EALS (1992) is the best-supported
evolutionary explanation for sex differences in human spatial cognitive skills. It proposes that the
sex differences in performance on a range of spatial task are a consequence of males (who hunted
much more than did females) being better adapted to encode space allocentrically, and to rely on
Euclidian navigational strategies employing distant landmarks, whereas females (who gathered
much more than did males) are better adapted to encode space more egocentrically, navigating
based more on local landmarks, and to be better able to precisely encode the position of particular
objects. We tested this hypothesis by comparing the performance of male and female participants
in a virtual navigation task (in which we could manipulate the landmark information available), a
virtual dead-reckoning task and an object location memory task. The patterns of sex differences in
the spatial tasks were strongly supportive of the hunter-gatherer hypothesis, but the sex-specific
correlations between tasks thought to be underpinned by the same spatial-cognitive ability were
not always supportive of the hypothesis, suggesting that the hunter-gatherer hypothesis requires
some revisions or extensions.
AB - The hunter-gatherer hypothesis of SILVERMAN and EALS (1992) is the best-supported
evolutionary explanation for sex differences in human spatial cognitive skills. It proposes that the
sex differences in performance on a range of spatial task are a consequence of males (who hunted
much more than did females) being better adapted to encode space allocentrically, and to rely on
Euclidian navigational strategies employing distant landmarks, whereas females (who gathered
much more than did males) are better adapted to encode space more egocentrically, navigating
based more on local landmarks, and to be better able to precisely encode the position of particular
objects. We tested this hypothesis by comparing the performance of male and female participants
in a virtual navigation task (in which we could manipulate the landmark information available), a
virtual dead-reckoning task and an object location memory task. The patterns of sex differences in
the spatial tasks were strongly supportive of the hunter-gatherer hypothesis, but the sex-specific
correlations between tasks thought to be underpinned by the same spatial-cognitive ability were
not always supportive of the hypothesis, suggesting that the hunter-gatherer hypothesis requires
some revisions or extensions.
KW - hunter-gatherer hypothesis
KW - sex-differences
KW - spatial cognition
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84897788989&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1556/JEP.12.2014.1.2
DO - 10.1556/JEP.12.2014.1.2
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84897788989
SN - 1789-2082
VL - 12
SP - 19
EP - 44
JO - Journal of Evolutionary Psychology
JF - Journal of Evolutionary Psychology
IS - 1
ER -