Several studies assumed that the analysis of numerical information happens in a fast and automatic manner in the human brain. Utilizing the high temporal resolution of electroencephalography (EEG) in a passive oddball adaptation paradigm, we compared event-related brain potentials (ERPs) evoked by unattended shape changes and unattended numerosity changes. We controlled visual stimulus properties in a stringent manner. Unattended changes in shape elicited significant, gradual adaptation effects in the range of early visual components, indicating the fast and automatic processing of shapes. Changes in numerosity did not elicit significant changes in these early ERP components. The lack of early number-specific effects was qualified by a sign...
The brain hosts a primitive number sense to non-symbolically represent numerosities of objects or ev...
Visual cognitive function is important in the construction of executive function in daily life. Perc...
Numbers appear everywhere in our daily life. Humans and animals share the ability to process non-sym...
Several studies assumed that the analysis of numerical information happens in a fast and automatic m...
AbstractSeveral studies assumed that the analysis of numerical information happens in a fast and aut...
AbstractPsychophysical studies have shown that numerosity is a sensory attribute susceptible to adap...
Psychophysical studies have shown that numerosity is a sensory attribute susceptible to adaptation. ...
Processing quantities such as the number of objects in a set, size, spatial arrangement and time is ...
The ability to handle approximate quantities, or number sense, has been recurrently linked to mathem...
Using the "stimulus-delay-target" experimental model, the brain mechanism of visual-spatial attentio...
In our daily lives, we have to process information about all kinds of quantities such as the set siz...
Is numerosity an abstraction that arises downstream of basic perceptual processing, or does the brai...
Perceiving numerosity, i.e. the set size of a group of items, is an evolutionarily preserved ability...
Much evidence has accumulated to suggest that many animals, including young human infants, possess a...
Humans and other animal species are endowed with the ability to sense, represent, and mentally manip...
The brain hosts a primitive number sense to non-symbolically represent numerosities of objects or ev...
Visual cognitive function is important in the construction of executive function in daily life. Perc...
Numbers appear everywhere in our daily life. Humans and animals share the ability to process non-sym...
Several studies assumed that the analysis of numerical information happens in a fast and automatic m...
AbstractSeveral studies assumed that the analysis of numerical information happens in a fast and aut...
AbstractPsychophysical studies have shown that numerosity is a sensory attribute susceptible to adap...
Psychophysical studies have shown that numerosity is a sensory attribute susceptible to adaptation. ...
Processing quantities such as the number of objects in a set, size, spatial arrangement and time is ...
The ability to handle approximate quantities, or number sense, has been recurrently linked to mathem...
Using the "stimulus-delay-target" experimental model, the brain mechanism of visual-spatial attentio...
In our daily lives, we have to process information about all kinds of quantities such as the set siz...
Is numerosity an abstraction that arises downstream of basic perceptual processing, or does the brai...
Perceiving numerosity, i.e. the set size of a group of items, is an evolutionarily preserved ability...
Much evidence has accumulated to suggest that many animals, including young human infants, possess a...
Humans and other animal species are endowed with the ability to sense, represent, and mentally manip...
The brain hosts a primitive number sense to non-symbolically represent numerosities of objects or ev...
Visual cognitive function is important in the construction of executive function in daily life. Perc...
Numbers appear everywhere in our daily life. Humans and animals share the ability to process non-sym...