A large body of research now supports the claim that two different and dissociable processes are involved in making numerosity judgments regarding visual stimuli: subitising (fast and nearly errorless) for up to 4 stimuli, and counting (slow and error-prone) when more than 4 stimuli are presented. We studied tactile numerosity judgments for combinations of 1-7 vibrotactile stimuli presented simultaneously over the body surface. In experiment 1, the stimuli were presented once, while in experiment 2 conditions of single presentation and repeated presentation of the stimulus were compared. Neither experiment provided any evidence for a discontinuity in the slope of either the RT or error data suggesting that subitisation does not occur for ta...
'Subitizing' refers to fast and error-free numerosity judgment for small (<4) sets of items. For lar...
The last few years have seen a rapid growth of research on the topic of tactile attention. We review...
Interest in the use of tactile information displays has grown rapidly in recent years. However, rela...
There is a growing interest in the question whether the phenomenon of subitising (fast and accurate ...
Numerosity judgments of small sets of items (≤ 3) are generally fast and errorfree, while response t...
Research has shown that unreported information stored in rapidly decaying visual representations may...
Subitizing' refers to fast and accurate judgement of small numerosities, whereas for larger numerosi...
‘Subitizing’ refers to fast and accurate judgement of small numerosities, whereas for larger numeros...
The aim of this study was to investigate the extent to which tactile information that is unavailable...
\u3cp\u3eNumerosity judgments of small sets of items (≤ 3) are generally fast and error free, while ...
Many studies have shown that people may have the ability to extract summary statistics over objects/...
Humans and other species share a perceptual mechanism dedicated to the representation of approximate...
‘Subitizing’ refers to rapid and accurate judgement of small numbers of items, while response times ...
A large body of evidence suggests that an approximate number sense allows humans to estimate numeros...
Evidence for an approximate analog system of numbers has been provided by the finding that the compa...
'Subitizing' refers to fast and error-free numerosity judgment for small (<4) sets of items. For lar...
The last few years have seen a rapid growth of research on the topic of tactile attention. We review...
Interest in the use of tactile information displays has grown rapidly in recent years. However, rela...
There is a growing interest in the question whether the phenomenon of subitising (fast and accurate ...
Numerosity judgments of small sets of items (≤ 3) are generally fast and errorfree, while response t...
Research has shown that unreported information stored in rapidly decaying visual representations may...
Subitizing' refers to fast and accurate judgement of small numerosities, whereas for larger numerosi...
‘Subitizing’ refers to fast and accurate judgement of small numerosities, whereas for larger numeros...
The aim of this study was to investigate the extent to which tactile information that is unavailable...
\u3cp\u3eNumerosity judgments of small sets of items (≤ 3) are generally fast and error free, while ...
Many studies have shown that people may have the ability to extract summary statistics over objects/...
Humans and other species share a perceptual mechanism dedicated to the representation of approximate...
‘Subitizing’ refers to rapid and accurate judgement of small numbers of items, while response times ...
A large body of evidence suggests that an approximate number sense allows humans to estimate numeros...
Evidence for an approximate analog system of numbers has been provided by the finding that the compa...
'Subitizing' refers to fast and error-free numerosity judgment for small (<4) sets of items. For lar...
The last few years have seen a rapid growth of research on the topic of tactile attention. We review...
Interest in the use of tactile information displays has grown rapidly in recent years. However, rela...