While associations between number and space, in the form of a spatially oriented numerical representation, have been extensively reported in human adults, the origins of this phenomenon are still poorly understood. The commonly accepted view is that this number-space association is a product of human invention, with accounts proposing that culture, symbolic knowledge, and mathematics education are at the roots of this phenomenon. Here we show that preverbal infants aged 7 months, who lack symbolic knowledge and mathematics education, show a preference for increasing magnitude displayed in a left-to-right spatial orientation. Infants habituated to left-to-right oriented increasing or decreasing numerical sequences showed an overall higher looking time to new left-to-right oriented increasing numerical sequences at test (Experiment 1). This pattern did not hold when infants were presented with the same ordinal numerical information displayed from right to left (Experiment 2). The different pattern of results was congruent with the presence of a malleable, context-dependent baseline preference for increasing, left-to-right oriented, numerosities (Experiment 3). These findings are suggestive of an early predisposition in humans to link numerical order with a left-to-right spatial orientation, which precedes the acquisition of symbolic abilities, mathematics education, and the acquisition of reading and writing skills.

De Hevia, M. D., Girelli, L., Addabbo, M., Macchi Cassia, V., Human infants' preference for left-to-right oriented increasing numerical sequences, <<PLOS ONE>>, 2014; 9 (5): e96412-N/A. [doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0096412] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/255314]

Human infants' preference for left-to-right oriented increasing numerical sequences

Addabbo, Margaret;
2014

Abstract

While associations between number and space, in the form of a spatially oriented numerical representation, have been extensively reported in human adults, the origins of this phenomenon are still poorly understood. The commonly accepted view is that this number-space association is a product of human invention, with accounts proposing that culture, symbolic knowledge, and mathematics education are at the roots of this phenomenon. Here we show that preverbal infants aged 7 months, who lack symbolic knowledge and mathematics education, show a preference for increasing magnitude displayed in a left-to-right spatial orientation. Infants habituated to left-to-right oriented increasing or decreasing numerical sequences showed an overall higher looking time to new left-to-right oriented increasing numerical sequences at test (Experiment 1). This pattern did not hold when infants were presented with the same ordinal numerical information displayed from right to left (Experiment 2). The different pattern of results was congruent with the presence of a malleable, context-dependent baseline preference for increasing, left-to-right oriented, numerosities (Experiment 3). These findings are suggestive of an early predisposition in humans to link numerical order with a left-to-right spatial orientation, which precedes the acquisition of symbolic abilities, mathematics education, and the acquisition of reading and writing skills.
2014
AREA11 - SCIENZE STORICHE, FILOSOFICHE, PEDAGOGICHE E PSICOLOGICHE
Articolo su rivista internazionale
Inglese
Articolo in rivista
Inglese
infants
number
number-space mapping
looking times
Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
9
5
2014
e96412
N/A
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
De Hevia, M. D., Girelli, L., Addabbo, M., Macchi Cassia, V., Human infants' preference for left-to-right oriented increasing numerical sequences, <<PLOS ONE>>, 2014; 9 (5): e96412-N/A. [doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0096412] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/255314]
open
262
de Hevia, Maria Dolores; Girelli, Luisa; Addabbo, Margaret; Macchi Cassia, Viola
4
art_per_29
03. Contributo in rivista::Articolo in rivista, Nota a sentenza
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/255314
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