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Rebecca Patterson

Ordinal Knowledge: Number names and number concepts in Chinese and English - 0 views

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    Abstract Assessed the impact of linguistic differences in ordinal number names on children's acquisition and use of ordinal numbers and their understanding of ordinal concepts. Elementary school children (aged 5.4-10.6 yrs) in China and the US performed a series of tasks assessing understanding of ordinal numbers and concepts. The results show differences in the acquisition and use of ordinal numbers corresponding to linguistic differences in ordinal names in their native languages. On tasks assessing children's conceptual knowledge of ordinal relations, a more complicated picture emerged. These results suggest that (1) children induce their language's set of ordinal number names by generalization based on rules sanctioned by early examples, and (2) the relation between ordinal names and ordinal concepts is a complex one, with language only one source of difficulty in understanding ordinal relations. Implications for studies of the relation between linguistic structure and cognitive development are discussed, in particular the possibility that effects of linguistic differences may vary for different levels of development and for different aspects of cognition. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
Rebecca Patterson

Origins of Number Sense - 0 views

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    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 ratio limits numerosity discrimination in auditory-temporal sequences and visual-spatial arrays. Nine-month-old infants, in contrast, successfully discriminated 12 from 8 sounds, but not 10 from 8 sounds, providing evidence that numerosity discrimination increases in precision over development, prior to the emergence of language or symbolic counting.
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