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Spatial Intelligence and Learning Center
NSF Science of Learning Center
National Science Foundation

The SILC Vision

Spatial thinking is both a key intellectual issue in cognitive science and a critically important aspect of problem solving in science, engineering and mathematics. It provides the foundation for a wide range of reasoning and communication skills, as varied as the design of buildings, the solution of mathematics problems, and the use of spatial metaphor in everyday language.

  • Spatial intelligence enables us to find our way in the world and to make tools, by encoding and transforming information about objects, their configurations, and their locations.
  • In the natural sciences, spatial thinking often provides unique insights. For example, geoscientists use visualizations to understand the processes that affect the formation of the Earth. Engineers use sketches and diagrams to anticipate how various forces may affect the design of a structure.
  • In medicine, the ability of a neurosurgeon to visualize particular brain areas from MRI may determine the outcome of a surgical procedure.

Thus, progress and performance in various science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields is strongly tied to improving people's ability to reason about spatial configurations and their properties.

More generally, an informed citizen in the 21st century must be fluent at processing spatial abstractions including graphs, diagrams, and other visualizations. Research that reveals how to increase the level of spatial functioning in the population could therefore significantly improve the effectiveness of the workforce. In addition, such research could lead to the reduction of gender and SES differences in spatial functioning and thus have an important impact on social equity. Yet despite the importance of spatial learning, relatively little research has addressed how it can be shaped and improved.


Making an investment in spatial learning now could lead to tremendous future benefits. For comparison, consider how substantial investments in reading research approximately 20 years ago catalyzed progress in that field, leading to advances in the understanding of the cognitive and neurological processes involved in reading that provided the foundation for developing effective strategies to combat illiteracy and reading disability. We are now in a comparable position with respect to spatial learning -- we are poised to make rapid progress that will have a major impact on education and practice.

We therefore have established the Spatial Intelligence and Learning Center (SILC). Our overarching goals are

  1. To understand spatial learning
  2. To use this knowledge to develop programs and technologies that will transform educational practice and support the capability of all children and adolescents to develop the skills required to compete in a global economy.

The core theme of SILC is that spatial cognition is malleable, and hence that spatial learning can be fostered by effective technology and education. This position is based on recent evidence from multiple sources:

  • Developmental research now indicates that cognitive growth is not simply the unfolding of a maturational program but instead involves considerable learning.
  • New neuroscience research indicates substantial developmental plasticity in neural growth.
  • Cognitive and educational research has shown us significant effects of experience on spatial skill.

SILC involves a consortium of researchers from cognitive science, spanning psychology, computer science, education, and neuroscience, and practicing geoscientists and engineers who are particularly interested in spatial thinking in their fields. By tightly linking research and educational practice, we hope to achieve these goals.

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SILC NEWS/UPDATES

Today is March 10, 2010

NEW RELEASE:
CogSketch v1.19 (3/10/2010)
(download here)

see SILC in the press

Read our latest updates and incoming news below or for SILC in the press go to our Press Room (click on PRESS ROOM icon above).

3/4/2010
Please, welcome our new Spatial Network Members: Hilary Barth, Sue Becker, Nathan Greenauer, Toru Ishikawa, Shaun P. Vecera, Tom verguts and Christoph Weidemann.

3/1/2010
Our March Showcase is on-line: The Role of Parent Gesture In Children's Spatial Language Development [Erica Cartmill, Shannon M. Pruden Dick, Susan C. Levine, Susan Goldin-Meadow].

2/18/2010
Please, welcome our new Spatial Network Member: Kevin Mulqueeny.

2/12/2010
Job opening for a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Spatial Intelligence and Learning Center, University of Chicago.

2/12/2010
New publication by our SILC Members: Jee, B. D., Uttal, D. H., Gentner, D., Manduca, C., Shipley, T., Sageman, B., Ormand, C. J., & Tikoff, B. (2010). Analogical thinking in geoscience education.

2/10/2010
Note: Full paper submission deadline [in Calls section on Meetings page] for Spatial Cognition 2010 has been changed to: February 21, 2010.

2/9/2010
Please, welcome our new Spatial Network Members: Ed Golob and Kelly McCormick.

2/5/2010
Please, note that we will soon be implementing a database for the Bibliography page. Due to this we are only up-dating the database.

2/5/2010
Please, welcome our new Spatial Network Member: Michael Brown.

2/1/2010
Our February Showcase is on-line: Playful Learning: Exploring the Role of Dialogic Inquiry and Exploration in Children's Developing Shape Concepts [Kelly R. Fisher, Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, and Nora Newcombe].

1/27/2010
Read the current Press on SILC-generated research: Female teachers' math anxiety affects girls' math achievement by Sian L. Beilock, Elizabeth A. Gunderson, Gerardo Ramirez and Susan C. Levine.

1/7/2010
Please, welcome our new Spatial Network Member: Roy Ruddle.

1/6/2010
The January SILC Showcase is now on-line: Facilitation of spatial skills necessary in performing geologic transformations [Ilyse Resnick, Temple University; Thomas Shipley, Temple University; Cathryn Manduca, Carleton College; and Nora Newcombe, Temple University].

12/21/2009
Updates were made to our CfP/Conferences page and Jobs page.

12/21/2009
Links were fixed under the sketch inquiry, Help Us Gather Sketches, on our homepage. Please, note that if you ever encounter a link that does not work, please send it to the attention of Jenn Stedillie, webmaster for this site:  

12/21/2009
Please, welcome our new Spatial Network Members: Elena Andonova, Kirsten Butcher, Liz Chrastil, Lisa Douglas & Ian Fogarty.

12/02/2009
The December SILC Showcase is now on-line: Spatial categories across languages [Naveen Khetarpal, University of Chicago; Asifa Majid, Max-Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen; Terry Regier, University of California, Berkeley].


Read about past SILC News in our Archive.