Jordan Kerry E, Brannon Elizabeth M
Center for Cognitive Neuroscience and Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Feb 28;103(9):3486-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0508107103. Epub 2006 Feb 21.
Human infants can discriminate visual and auditory stimuli solely on the basis of number, suggesting a developmental foundation for the nonverbal number representations of adult humans. Recent studies suggest that these language-independent number representations are multisensory in both adult humans and nonhuman animals. Surprisingly, however, previous studies have yielded mixed evidence concerning whether nonverbal numerical representations independent of sensory modality are present early in human development. In this article, we use a paradigm that avoids stimulus confounds present in previous studies of cross-modal numerical mapping in infants. We show that 7-month-old infants preferentially attend to visual displays of adult humans that numerically match the number of adult humans they hear speaking. These data provide evidence that by 7 months of age, infants connect numerical representations across different sensory modalities when presented with human faces and voices. Results support the possibility of a shared system between preverbal infants and nonverbal animals for representing number.
人类婴儿仅基于数量就能区分视觉和听觉刺激,这表明成年人类的非语言数字表征具有发育基础。最近的研究表明,这些独立于语言的数字表征在成年人类和非人类动物中都是多感官的。然而,令人惊讶的是,以前的研究对于在人类发育早期是否存在独立于感觉模态的非语言数字表征产生了混杂的证据。在本文中,我们使用了一种范式,该范式避免了先前婴儿跨模态数字映射研究中存在的刺激混淆。我们表明,7个月大的婴儿优先关注成年人类的视觉展示,这些展示在数量上与他们听到说话的成年人类数量相匹配。这些数据提供了证据,表明到7个月大时,婴儿在面对人脸和声音时会在不同感觉模态之间建立数字表征的联系。结果支持了前语言婴儿和非语言动物之间存在一个共享的数字表征系统的可能性。