We orient numbers from left (small numerical values) to right (large numerical values) (Dehaene et al., 1993). This peculiarity may develop early in life as a predisposition to relate number to space is in place before the acquisition of language (deHevia et al., 2008). Bird species also exhibit a disposition to map numerical magnitudes from left to right (Rugani et al. 2007, 2010a, 2011) supporting the idea of a pre-linguistic origin. In animal models though, the bias when locating objects or numerically-identified targets has been described selectively for the leftward side. Such evidence could depend on a general bias in the allocation of attention under the control of the right hemisphere. Here we report evidence for an advantage at pro...
In order to face a constantly changing environment, animals need to be able to update their knowledg...
Humans represent numbers along a mental number line (MNL), where smaller values are located on the l...
Davis and Pérusse (1988) argued that, although animals can be trained to make numerical discriminat...
In this review, we discuss evidence showing that birds (Gallus gallus and Nucifraga columbiana) repr...
We associate small numbers with the left side and large numbers with the right side of space. Recent...
Young domestic chicks and adult Clark’s nutcrackers can learn to identify a target element (i.e. the...
Different species show an intriguing similarity in representing numerosity in space, starting from l...
Adult humans map numbers onto a mental number line oriented from left to right. (Dehaene, 1997, Deha...
In our previous research we reported a leftward-asymmetry in domestic chicks required to identify a ...
We report that adult nutcrackers (Nucifraga columbiana) and newborn domestic chicks (Gallus gallus) ...
When trained to peck a selected position in a sagittally-oriented series of identical food container...
Young domestic chicks, trained to identify a target element (i.e. the 4th) in a series identical ele...
Number-space mapping in the newborn chick resembles humans’ mental number line Rosa Rugani,1,2 * Gio...
Francis Galton first reported that humans mentally organize numbers from left to right on a mental n...
Humans primarily attend to objects in the left side of space, as shown in cancellation tasks routine...
In order to face a constantly changing environment, animals need to be able to update their knowledg...
Humans represent numbers along a mental number line (MNL), where smaller values are located on the l...
Davis and Pérusse (1988) argued that, although animals can be trained to make numerical discriminat...
In this review, we discuss evidence showing that birds (Gallus gallus and Nucifraga columbiana) repr...
We associate small numbers with the left side and large numbers with the right side of space. Recent...
Young domestic chicks and adult Clark’s nutcrackers can learn to identify a target element (i.e. the...
Different species show an intriguing similarity in representing numerosity in space, starting from l...
Adult humans map numbers onto a mental number line oriented from left to right. (Dehaene, 1997, Deha...
In our previous research we reported a leftward-asymmetry in domestic chicks required to identify a ...
We report that adult nutcrackers (Nucifraga columbiana) and newborn domestic chicks (Gallus gallus) ...
When trained to peck a selected position in a sagittally-oriented series of identical food container...
Young domestic chicks, trained to identify a target element (i.e. the 4th) in a series identical ele...
Number-space mapping in the newborn chick resembles humans’ mental number line Rosa Rugani,1,2 * Gio...
Francis Galton first reported that humans mentally organize numbers from left to right on a mental n...
Humans primarily attend to objects in the left side of space, as shown in cancellation tasks routine...
In order to face a constantly changing environment, animals need to be able to update their knowledg...
Humans represent numbers along a mental number line (MNL), where smaller values are located on the l...
Davis and Pérusse (1988) argued that, although animals can be trained to make numerical discriminat...