“…The latter strategy was expected to yield better selective attention (see Blumberg and Torenberg, 2003). Children also were expected to show greater recall of items placed in corners, regardless of their status as relevant or irrelevant, consistent with young children's demonstrated use of geometric cues (Spelke and Hermer, 1996), and spatial context (DeLoache and Todd, 1988;Hazen and Volk-Hudson, 1984;Hiesel and Ritter, 1981) to recall item locations. Thus, location of items in corners was expected to facilitate children's selective attention and incidental learning.…”