International audienceAll humans, regardless of their culture and education, possess an intuitive understanding of number. Behavioural evidence suggests that numerical competence may be present early on in infancy. Here, we present brain-imaging evidence for distinct cerebral coding of number and object identity in 3-mo-old infants. We compared the visual event-related potentials evoked by unforeseen changes either in the identity of objects forming a set, or in the cardinal of this set. In adults and 4-y-old children, number sense relies on a dorsal system of bilateral intraparietal areas, different from the ventral occipitotemporal system sensitive to object identity. Scalp voltage topographies and cortical source modelling revealed a sim...
AbstractDoes the primate brain contain a dedicated and localized neural circuitry for processing gen...
SummaryHow the human brain encodes numbers is revealed by a new analysis of patterns of brain activi...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2014.Living in...
International audienceAll humans, regardless of their culture and education, possess an intuitive un...
This article focuses on typical trajectories of numerical cognition from infancy all the way through...
Number sense in infancy 2 ABSTRACT—Approximate number discrimination in adult human and nonhuman...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2018.The acqui...
The human infant brain is the only known machine able to master a natural language and develop expli...
textInfant number perception is a topic that has been studied for many years, but many questions re...
Behavioral and brain imaging research indicates that human infants, humans adults, and many nonhuman...
The human infant brain is the only known machine able to master a natural language and develop expli...
Many studies carried out over the last 30 years lead to the suggestion that flexible skills and beli...
The early studies of infants\u27 numerical abilities have shown that infants could discriminate nume...
Humans represent numbers on a mental number line with smaller numbers on the left and larger number...
International audienceThe development of mathematical skills in early childhood relies on number sen...
AbstractDoes the primate brain contain a dedicated and localized neural circuitry for processing gen...
SummaryHow the human brain encodes numbers is revealed by a new analysis of patterns of brain activi...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2014.Living in...
International audienceAll humans, regardless of their culture and education, possess an intuitive un...
This article focuses on typical trajectories of numerical cognition from infancy all the way through...
Number sense in infancy 2 ABSTRACT—Approximate number discrimination in adult human and nonhuman...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2018.The acqui...
The human infant brain is the only known machine able to master a natural language and develop expli...
textInfant number perception is a topic that has been studied for many years, but many questions re...
Behavioral and brain imaging research indicates that human infants, humans adults, and many nonhuman...
The human infant brain is the only known machine able to master a natural language and develop expli...
Many studies carried out over the last 30 years lead to the suggestion that flexible skills and beli...
The early studies of infants\u27 numerical abilities have shown that infants could discriminate nume...
Humans represent numbers on a mental number line with smaller numbers on the left and larger number...
International audienceThe development of mathematical skills in early childhood relies on number sen...
AbstractDoes the primate brain contain a dedicated and localized neural circuitry for processing gen...
SummaryHow the human brain encodes numbers is revealed by a new analysis of patterns of brain activi...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2014.Living in...