000340832 000__ 03128cam\a2200385\a\4500 000340832 001__ 340832 000340832 005__ 20210513123738.0 000340832 008__ 090227s2009\\\\nyuab\\\\b\\\\001\0\eng\\ 000340832 010__ $$a 2009007822 000340832 020__ $$a9780385528061 000340832 020__ $$a038552806X 000340832 035__ $$a(OCoLC)ocn264044727 000340832 035__ $$a340832 000340832 040__ $$aDLC$$cDLC$$dYDX$$dBTCTA$$dYDXCP$$dEINCP$$dMOF$$dWIM$$dCDX$$dABG$$dUPZ$$dBRL$$dIXA$$dMSO$$dVP@$$dSPU$$dIG#$$dQ2Z 000340832 049__ $$aISEA 000340832 05000 $$aQP491$$b.E45 2009 000340832 08200 $$a153.7/52$$222 000340832 1001_ $$aEllard, Colin,$$d1958- 000340832 24510 $$aYou are here :$$bwhy we can find our way to the Moon but get lost in the mall /$$cColin Ellard. 000340832 260__ $$aNew York :$$bDoubleday,$$cc2009. 000340832 300__ $$a328 p. :$$bill., maps ;$$c25 cm. 000340832 500__ $$aOriginally published as: Where am I? Toronto : HarperCollins, 2009. 000340832 500__ $$a"What science says about our spatial intelligence and how it shapes our connections to nature, cities, homes, and virtual worlds" -- Dust jacket subtitle. 000340832 504__ $$aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 305-321) and index. 000340832 5050_ $$aLost and found -- Why ants don't get lost at the mall : how humans and animals navigate space. Looking for targets : simple tactics for finding our way that we share with all other animals ; Looking for landmarks : how we search for the invisible by using the visible ; Looking for routes : how we try to keep track of where we are by noting where we have been ; Maps in the world : how expert navigators use specialized senses to find their way ; Maps in mouse minds : the mental maps of space possessed by animals ; Muddled maps in human minds : the peculiar nature of our mental maps and what it says about how we understand space -- Making your way in the world today : how our mind shapes the places where we work, live, and play. House space : how our mental maps influence our behavior inside our homes ; Working space : how the geography of our mind influences our habits of work and play ; City space : how knowing (or not knowing) our place influences life in the city ; Cyberspace : how the nature of our mind makes it possible for us to live in electronic places ; Greenspace : how the features of our spatial brain influence our connections to, and neglect of, our natural environment ; The future of space. 000340832 520__ $$aPsychologist Colin Ellard explains how, over centuries of innovation, we have lost our instinctive ability to find our way and suggests that architects and city planners need to consider human behavior when designing human environments, and we all need to recognize that we are part of, not isolated from, the space around us. 000340832 650_0 $$aSpace perception. 000340832 650_0 $$aOrientation (Physiology) 000340832 650_0 $$aOrientation (Psychology) 000340832 650_0 $$aAnimal orientation. 000340832 650_0 $$aCognitive maps (Psychology) 000340832 650_0 $$aGeographical perception. 000340832 7001_ $$aEllard, Colin,$$d1958-$$tWhere am I. 000340832 85200 $$bgen$$hQP491$$i.E45$$i2009 000340832 85642 $$3Contributor biographical information$$uhttp://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy1007/2009007822-b.html 000340832 85642 $$3Publisher description$$uhttp://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy1007/2009007822-d.html 000340832 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:340832$$pGLOBAL_SET 000340832 980__ $$aBIB 000340832 980__ $$aBOOK