Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 358 Meliora Hall, PO Box 270268, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627-0258, United States.
Cognition. 2017 Dec;169:36-45. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.07.012. Epub 2017 Aug 12.
The existence of a generalized magnitude system in the human mind and brain has been studied extensively but remains elusive because it has not been clearly defined. Here we show that one possibility is the representation of relative magnitudes via ratio calculations: ratios are a naturally dimensionless or abstract quantity that could qualify as a common currency for magnitudes measured on vastly different psychophysical scales and in different sensory modalities like size, number, duration, and loudness. In a series of demonstrations based on comparisons of item sequences, we demonstrate that subjects spontaneously use knowledge of inter-item ratios within and across sensory modalities and across magnitude domains to rate sequences as more or less similar on a sliding scale. Moreover, they rate ratio-preserved sequences as more similar to each other than sequences in which only ordinal relations are preserved, indicating that subjects are aware of differences in levels of relative-magnitude information preservation. The ubiquity of this ability across many different magnitude pairs, even those sharing no sensory information, suggests a highly general code that could qualify as a candidate for a generalized magnitude representation.
人类心智和大脑中存在广义量系统,这一系统已被广泛研究,但仍难以捉摸,因为它尚未被明确界定。在这里,我们展示了一种可能性,即通过比率计算来表示相对大小:比率是一种自然无量纲或抽象的数量,可以作为在不同感觉模态(如大小、数量、持续时间和响度)和不同心理物理尺度上测量的大小的通用货币。在一系列基于项目序列比较的演示中,我们证明了主体会自发地利用内在和跨感觉模态以及跨大小域的项目间比率知识,来对序列进行滑动比例的相似性评分。此外,他们会将保持比率的序列评定为彼此之间更相似,而不是只保持顺序关系的序列,这表明主体意识到了相对大小信息保持程度的差异。这种能力在许多不同的大小对中普遍存在,即使它们没有共享任何感觉信息,这表明存在一种高度通用的代码,可以作为广义量表示的候选。