Human adults and nonhuman primates share a subset of nonverbal numerical skills that are considered the evolutionary foundation of more complex numerical reasoning. Intriguing experiments have shown that 10- to 12-month-old infants are able to distinguish between large (8 vs. 12) and small (1 vs. 2, 1 vs. 3, 2 vs. 3) sets of objects but seem incapable of comparing quantities that fall in the middle area between large and small numerosities, such as 1 versus 4. This finding suggests that there are two separate nonverbal numerical systems. Other researchers argue that there is continuity in the representation of numbers. Experimental evidence demonstrating that newborn chicks are able to process addition and subtraction such as (4 \u20131) ve...
Non-verbal numerical behavior in human infants, human adults, and non-human primates appears to be r...
Chicks were trained to discriminate small sets of identical elements. They were then tested for choi...
The early studies of infants\u27 numerical abilities have shown that infants could discriminate nume...
Human adults and nonhuman primates share a subset of nonverbal numerical skills that are considered ...
The aim of this work is to investigate the domains of the two systems that are considered to be at t...
Human adults master sophisticated, abstract numerical calculations that are mostly based on symbolic...
A variety of experimental methods demonstrated as non-verbal numerical representations are based on ...
Davis and Pérusse (1988) argued that, although animals can be trained to make numerical discriminat...
In a variety of circumstances animals can represent numerical values per se, although it is unclear ...
The history of the study of animal numerical cognition is characterized by an unfortunate start: the...
Instead of the scepticism on animal numerical understanding that characterized the first half of the...
Instead of the scepticism on animal numerical understanding that characterized the first half of the...
We associate small numbers with the left side and large numbers with the right side of space. Recent...
<p>There is a long-standing claim that humans and nonhuman primates share an evolutionarily ancient ...
ABSTRACT—There is increasing evidence that animals share with adult humans and perhaps human infants...
Non-verbal numerical behavior in human infants, human adults, and non-human primates appears to be r...
Chicks were trained to discriminate small sets of identical elements. They were then tested for choi...
The early studies of infants\u27 numerical abilities have shown that infants could discriminate nume...
Human adults and nonhuman primates share a subset of nonverbal numerical skills that are considered ...
The aim of this work is to investigate the domains of the two systems that are considered to be at t...
Human adults master sophisticated, abstract numerical calculations that are mostly based on symbolic...
A variety of experimental methods demonstrated as non-verbal numerical representations are based on ...
Davis and Pérusse (1988) argued that, although animals can be trained to make numerical discriminat...
In a variety of circumstances animals can represent numerical values per se, although it is unclear ...
The history of the study of animal numerical cognition is characterized by an unfortunate start: the...
Instead of the scepticism on animal numerical understanding that characterized the first half of the...
Instead of the scepticism on animal numerical understanding that characterized the first half of the...
We associate small numbers with the left side and large numbers with the right side of space. Recent...
<p>There is a long-standing claim that humans and nonhuman primates share an evolutionarily ancient ...
ABSTRACT—There is increasing evidence that animals share with adult humans and perhaps human infants...
Non-verbal numerical behavior in human infants, human adults, and non-human primates appears to be r...
Chicks were trained to discriminate small sets of identical elements. They were then tested for choi...
The early studies of infants\u27 numerical abilities have shown that infants could discriminate nume...