Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences.
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University.
Dev Psychol. 2014 Jan;50(1):108-12. doi: 10.1037/a0032986. Epub 2013 May 6.
Over the past few decades, there has been extensive debate as to whether humans represent number abstractly and, if so, whether perceptual features of a set such as cumulative surface area or contour length are extracted more readily than number from the external world. Here we show that 7-month-old infants are sensitive to smaller ratio changes in number than cumulative area when each variable is tested separately and that infants prefer to look at number changes compared with area changes when the 2 variables are pitted directly against each other. Our results provide strong evidence that number is a more salient dimension to young infants than cumulative surface area and that infants' ability to discriminate sets on the basis of number is more finely tuned than their ability to discriminate sets on the basis of cumulative surface area.
在过去的几十年中,人们一直在广泛争论人类是否能够抽象地表示数字,如果可以,那么从外部世界中提取集合的累积面积或轮廓长度等感知特征是否比数字更容易。在这里,我们表明,当分别测试每个变量时,7 个月大的婴儿对数字的较小比例变化比对累积面积更敏感,并且当直接将这两个变量进行对比时,婴儿更喜欢看数字变化而不是面积变化。我们的结果提供了强有力的证据,表明数字对婴儿来说比累积面积更突出,并且婴儿基于数字来区分集合的能力比他们基于累积面积来区分集合的能力更加精细。