Numerical abstraction in infants: Another look |
Author(s):
,Journal/Book: Develop Psychol. 1997; 33: 750 First St NE, Washington, DC 20002-4242. Amer Psychological Assoc. 423-428.
Abstract: This article examines an important finding from the literature on infant numerical competence. The finding, reported by P. Starkey, E. S. Spelke, and R. Gelman (1990), was that infants looked longer toward a visual display that was equal in number to an auditory set. In Experiment 1, when the procedures described by P. Starkey et al. Were followed and duration was held constant across auditory sequences that varied in number, infants looked longer toward the display that was not numerically equivalent to the auditory set. In Experiment 2, when the rare and duration of the auditory sequences were varied randomly within infants, no significant preference for either the equivalent or nonequivalent visual display was shown. These results raise questions about P. Starkey et al.'s claims that infants can represent the numerosity of sets in different modalities and then perform one-one correspondence computations over them.
Note: Article Mix KS, Indiana Univ, Dept Psychol, Bloomington,IN 47405 USA
Keyword(s): PERCEPTION
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