Feigenson Lisa, Dehaene Stanislas, Spelke Elizabeth
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, 3400 North Charles Street, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
Trends Cogn Sci. 2004 Jul;8(7):307-14. doi: 10.1016/j.tics.2004.05.002.
What representations underlie the ability to think and reason about number? Whereas certain numerical concepts, such as the real numbers, are only ever represented by a subset of human adults, other numerical abilities are widespread and can be observed in adults, infants and other animal species. We review recent behavioral and neuropsychological evidence that these ontogenetically and phylogenetically shared abilities rest on two core systems for representing number. Performance signatures common across development and across species implicate one system for representing large, approximate numerical magnitudes, and a second system for the precise representation of small numbers of individual objects. These systems account for our basic numerical intuitions, and serve as the foundation for the more sophisticated numerical concepts that are uniquely human.
思考和推理数字的能力基于哪些表现形式?某些数字概念,如实数,仅由一部分成年人类来表征,而其他数字能力则广泛存在,在成年人、婴儿和其他动物物种中都能观察到。我们回顾了近期的行为和神经心理学证据,这些在个体发育和系统发育上共有的能力基于两个表征数字的核心系统。贯穿发育过程和不同物种的共同表现特征表明,一个系统用于表征大的、近似的数值大小,另一个系统用于精确表征少量的单个物体。这些系统构成了我们基本的数字直觉,并为人类独有的更复杂的数字概念奠定了基础。