Barner David
University of California,San Diego.
J Child Lang. 2017 May;44(3):553-590. doi: 10.1017/S0305000917000058. Epub 2017 Apr 5.
Perceptual representations of objects and approximate magnitudes are often invoked as building blocks that children combine to acquire the positive integers. Systems of numerical perception are either assumed to contain the logical foundations of arithmetic innately, or to supply the basis for their induction. I propose an alternative to this framework, and argue that the integers are not learned from perceptual systems, but arise to explain perception. Using cross-linguistic and developmental data, I show that small (1-4) and large (5+) numbers arise both historically and in individual children via distinct mechanisms, constituting independent learning problems, neither of which begins with perceptual building blocks. Children first learn small numbers using the same logic that supports other linguistic number marking (e.g. singular/plural). Years later, they infer the logic of counting from the relations between large number words and their roles in blind counting procedures, only incidentally associating number words with approximate magnitudes.
物体的感知表征和近似数量通常被视为儿童用以组合起来获取正整数的基石。数值感知系统要么被假定天生就包含算术的逻辑基础,要么为算术归纳提供基础。我提出了一个替代此框架的观点,并认为整数并非从感知系统中学到的,而是为了解释感知而产生的。利用跨语言和发展数据,我表明小数字(约1 - 4)和大数字(约5及以上)在历史上以及在个体儿童中都是通过不同机制出现的,构成了独立的学习问题,且两者都不是从感知基石开始的。儿童首先使用与支持其他语言数字标记(如单数/复数)相同的逻辑来学习小数字。几年后,他们从大数字词之间的关系及其在盲数程序中的作用推断出计数逻辑,只是偶然地将数字词与近似数量联系起来。