Flombaum Jonathan I, Junge Justin A, Hauser Marc D
Department of Psychology, Yale University, Box 208205, New Haven, CT 06520-8205, USA.
Cognition. 2005 Oct;97(3):315-25. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2004.09.004. Epub 2005 Jan 6.
Mathematics is a uniquely human capacity. Studies of animals and human infants reveal, however, that this capacity builds on language-independent mechanisms for quantifying small numbers (<4) precisely and large numbers approximately. It is unclear whether animals and human infants can spontaneously tap mechanisms for quantifying large numbers to compute mathematical operations. Moreover, all available work on addition operations in non-human animals has confounded number with continuous perceptual properties (e.g. volume, contour length) that correlate with number. This study shows that rhesus monkeys spontaneously compute addition operations over large numbers, as opposed to continuous extents, and that the limit on this ability is set by the ratio difference between two numbers as opposed to their absolute difference.
数学是人类独有的能力。然而,对动物和人类婴儿的研究表明,这种能力建立在独立于语言的机制之上,这些机制能够精确地量化小数目(<4),并大致量化大数目。目前尚不清楚动物和人类婴儿是否能够自发地利用量化大数目来进行数学运算的机制。此外,所有关于非人类动物加法运算的现有研究都将数字与与数字相关的连续感知属性(如体积、轮廓长度)混淆了。这项研究表明,恒河猴能够自发地对大数目而非连续范围进行加法运算,而且这种能力的限制是由两个数字之间的比例差异而非绝对差异所决定的。