articleDevelopmental ScienceDec 23, 2004Closed access

Number sense in human infants

Boston University · Northeastern University · +2 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Four experiments used a preferential looking method to investigate 6-month-old infants' capacity to represent numerosity in visual-spatial displays. Building on previous findings that such infants discriminate between arrays of eight versus 16 discs, but not eight versus 12 discs (Xu & Spelke, 2000), Experiments 1 and 2 investigated whether infants' numerosity discrimination depends on the ratio of the two set sizes with even larger numerosities. Infants successfully discriminated between arrays of 16 versus 32 discs, but not 16 versus 24 discs, providing evidence that their discrimination shows the set-size ratio signature of numerosity discrimination in human adults, children and many non-human animals.…

Citation impact

630
total citations
FWCI
10.28
Percentile
100%
References
51
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Developmental psychology
  • Number sense
  • Cognitive science
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Reduced inequalities
No related works found for this paper.

Funding