“…In contrast, young children fail to navigate by landmark representations on a map when the landmark serves as an indirect cue to a hidden object and therefore must be combined with geometric information (Rutland, Custance, & Campbell, 1993; Shusterman, et al, 2008). Indeed, both children and adults show higher sensitivity to geometric information when maps are devoid of such landmarks than when they contain them (Dehaene, Izard, Pica, & Spelke, 2006; Shusterman, et al, 2008): representations of the geometry of the layout and of individual landmark objects may be mutually competitive (Lourenco, Addy, Huttenlocher & Fabian, 2011). …”