We studied the acquisition of the ordinal meaning of number words and examined its development relative to the acquisition of the cardinal meaning. Three groups of 3-, 4-, and 5-year-old children were tested in two tasks requiring the use of number words in both cardinal and ordinal contexts. Understanding of the counting principles was also measured by asking the children to assess the correctness of a cartoon character’s counting in both contexts. In general, the children performed cardinal tasks significantly better than ordinal ones. Tasks requiring the production of the number for a given quantity or position were solved more accurately than those testing the ability to select a set of n objects or the object in the nth position. Diffe...
Three studies examined the abstractness of children's mental representation of counting, and th...
This study explored the conceptual basis for the cardinal principle of counting. The Give-N task was...
Cardinal number acquisition plays an important role in children‟s sense of number. Various investig...
Children's understanding of the quantities represented by number words (i.e., cardinality) is a surp...
Understanding the way in which counting represent numerosities was shown to be a long-lasting proces...
The aim of this study is to describe in what way preschool activities contribute to t...
In this study, we use children's prior knowledge to support their development of cardinality underst...
This is a study of the level of children's understanding of cardinality, focusing on the difference...
Cardinality means that the last number word used in counting refers to the entire set of items and i...
A key question in early number development is how 4- and 5-year-olds learn the roles that counting a...
A key question in early number development is how 4- and 5-year-olds learn the roles that counting a...
We investigated whether specific input helps 3-1/2-year-olds discover that the last word in a count ...
Introduction. The ordinal theory of number development as recently advanced by Dr. Charles Brainerd ...
This paper examines how and when children come to understand the way in which counting determines nu...
This study followed a process-based approach, in which variability describe the changes that occurs ...
Three studies examined the abstractness of children's mental representation of counting, and th...
This study explored the conceptual basis for the cardinal principle of counting. The Give-N task was...
Cardinal number acquisition plays an important role in children‟s sense of number. Various investig...
Children's understanding of the quantities represented by number words (i.e., cardinality) is a surp...
Understanding the way in which counting represent numerosities was shown to be a long-lasting proces...
The aim of this study is to describe in what way preschool activities contribute to t...
In this study, we use children's prior knowledge to support their development of cardinality underst...
This is a study of the level of children's understanding of cardinality, focusing on the difference...
Cardinality means that the last number word used in counting refers to the entire set of items and i...
A key question in early number development is how 4- and 5-year-olds learn the roles that counting a...
A key question in early number development is how 4- and 5-year-olds learn the roles that counting a...
We investigated whether specific input helps 3-1/2-year-olds discover that the last word in a count ...
Introduction. The ordinal theory of number development as recently advanced by Dr. Charles Brainerd ...
This paper examines how and when children come to understand the way in which counting determines nu...
This study followed a process-based approach, in which variability describe the changes that occurs ...
Three studies examined the abstractness of children's mental representation of counting, and th...
This study explored the conceptual basis for the cardinal principle of counting. The Give-N task was...
Cardinal number acquisition plays an important role in children‟s sense of number. Various investig...