| Literature DB >> 21687440 |
Sara Cordes1, Elizabeth M Brannon.
Abstract
Despite a prevailing assumption in the developmental literature that changes in continuous quantities (i.e., surface area, duration) are easier to detect than changes in number, very little research has focused on the verity of this assumption. The few studies that have directly examined infants' discriminations of continuous extent have revealed that infants discriminate the duration of a single event and the area of a single item with similar levels of precision (Brannon et al., 2006; vanMarle and Wynn, 2006). But what about when items are presented in arrays? Infants appear to be much worse at representing the cumulative surface area compared to the numerosity of an array (Cordes and Brannon, 2008a), however this may be due to a noisy accumulation process and not a general finding pertaining to representations of the extent within an array. The current study investigates how well infants detect changes in the size of individual elements when they are presented within an array. Our results indicate that infants are less sensitive to continuous properties of items when they are presented within a set than when presented in isolation. Specifically we demonstrate that infants required a fourfold change in item size to detect a change when items were presented within a set of homogeneous elements. Rather than providing redundant cues that aided discrimination, presenting a set of identical elements appeared to hamper an infant's ability to detect changes in a single element's size. In addition to providing some of the first evidence to suggest that the presence of multiple items may hinder extent representations, these results provide converging lines of evidence to support the claim that, contrary to popular belief, infants are better at tracking number than continuous properties of a set.Entities:
Keywords: area discrimination; mathematical cognition; number; quantity representation; size discrimination
Year: 2011 PMID: 21687440 PMCID: PMC3110486 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Sample stimuli from Experiment 1a. Throughout habituation, the number of items in each display varied sixfold, however the size of the items remained constant. In test, infants saw displays with the same item size and displays with items that changed in size fourfold from habituation (Test A – item size decrease; Test B – item size increase).
Figure 2Mean looking times during the three familiar and three novel test trials for infants in Experiment 1 (variable number in habituation).
Figure 3Sample stimuli from Experiment 2a. In habituation, the number of items in each display and the size of the items remained constant throughout habituation. In test, infants saw displays with the same item size and displays with items that changed in size fourfold from habituation.
Figure 4Mean looking times during the three familiar and three novel test trials for infants in Experiment 2 (number constant in habituation).