Abstract

Cognition is heavily grounded in space. As animals that move in space, we travel both physically and mentally in space and time, reliving past events, imagining future ones, and even constructing imaginary scenarios that play out in stories. Mental exploration of space is extraordinarily flexible, allowing us to zoom, adopt different vantage points, mentally rotate, and attach objects and sense impressions to create events, whether remembered, planned, or simply invented. The properties of spatiotemporal cognition depend on a hippocampal–entorhinal circuit of place cells, grid cells and border cells, with combinations of grid-cell modules generating a vast number of potential spatial remappings. The generativity of language, often considered one of its defining properties, may therefore derive not from the nature of language itself, but rather from the generativity of spatiotemporal scenarios, with language having evolved as a means of sharing them. Much our understanding of the hippocampal–entorhinal circuit is derived from neurophysiological recording in the rat brain, implying that the spatiotemporal cognition underpinning language has a long evolutionary history.

Highlights

  • As animals that move, we are supremely adapted to knowing where we are in space, as well as knowing where we have been and where we might go

  • Many have argued that mental time travel is unique to humans, with other animals being effectively stuck in the present

  • Tulving (1972) has long argued that episodic memory, the capacity to consciously replay the past, is restricted to our own species, and Suddendorf and I extended this proposition to mental travels both forward and backward in time (Suddendorf & Corballis, 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

We are supremely adapted to knowing where we are in space, as well as knowing where we have been and where we might go next. These capacities depend on immediate sensory input, and on imagination; we can travel mentally in space and time, replaying past episodes in our lives and imagining future ones, bringing to mind events that have not occurred.

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