Title of article
Non-symbolic arithmetic in adults and young children
Author/Authors
Barth، نويسنده , , Hilary and La Mont، نويسنده , , Kristen and Lipton، نويسنده , , Jennifer and Dehaene، نويسنده , , Stanislas and Kanwisher، نويسنده , , Nancy and Spelke، نويسنده , , Elizabeth، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
24
From page
199
To page
222
Abstract
Five experiments investigated whether adults and preschool children can perform simple arithmetic calculations on non-symbolic numerosities. Previous research has demonstrated that human adults, human infants, and non-human animals can process numerical quantities through approximate representations of their magnitudes. Here we consider whether these non-symbolic numerical representations might serve as a building block of uniquely human, learned mathematics. Both adults and children with no training in arithmetic successfully performed approximate arithmetic on large sets of elements. Success at these tasks did not depend on non-numerical continuous quantities, modality-specific quantity information, the adoption of alternative non-arithmetic strategies, or learned symbolic arithmetic knowledge. Abstract numerical quantity representations therefore are computationally functional and may provide a foundation for formal mathematics.
Keywords
Crossmodal addition , Non-symbolic numerosities , Symbolic arithmetic
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2075959
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