Abstract
Four experiments investigated infants' sensitivity to large, approximate numerosities in auditory sequences. Prior studies provided evidence that 6-month-old infants discriminate large numerosities that differ by a ratio of 2.0, but not 1.5, when presented with arrays of visual forms in which many continuous variables are controlled. The present studies used a head-turn preference procedure to test for infants' numerosity discrimination with auditory sequences designed to control for element duration, sequence duration, interelement interval, and amount of acoustic energy. Six-month-old infants discriminated 16 from 8 sounds but failed to discriminate 12 from 8 sounds, providing evidence that the same 2.0…
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705
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Numerosity adaptation effect
- Psychology
- Interval (graph theory)
- Audiology
- Duration (music)
- Contrast (vision)
- Number sense
- Communication
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Reduced inequalities
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