The Neural Development of an Abstract Concept of Number

被引:142
作者
Cantlon, Jessica F. [1 ,2 ]
Libertus, Melissa E.
Pinel, Philippe [3 ,4 ,5 ]
Dehaene, Stanislas [3 ,4 ,5 ,6 ]
Brannon, Elizabeth M.
Pelphrey, Kevin A. [7 ]
机构
[1] Duke Univ, Dept Psychol & Neurosci, Durham, NC 27708 USA
[2] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
[3] INSERM, Gif Sur Yvette, France
[4] NeuroSpin Ctr, DSV I2BM, CEA, Gif Sur Yvette, France
[5] Univ Paris Sud, Gif Sur Yvette, France
[6] Coll France, F-75231 Paris, France
[7] Yale Univ, New Haven, CT USA
关键词
NUMERICAL INFORMATION; PARIETAL ACTIVATION; MAGNITUDE; REPRESENTATION; KNOWLEDGE; DISCRIMINATION; NUMEROSITIES; SUBTRACTION; QUANTITY; CIRCUITS;
D O I
10.1162/jocn.2008.21159
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
As literate adults, we appreciate numerical values as abstract entities that can be represented by a numeral, a word, a number of lines on a scorecard, or a sequence of chimes from a clock. This abstract, notation-independent appreciation of numbers develops gradually over the first several years of life. Here, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we examine the brain mechanisms that 6- and 7-year-old children and adults recruit to solve numerical comparisons across different notation systems. The data reveal that when young children compare numerical values in symbolic and nonsymbolic notations, they invoke the same network of brain regions as adults including occipito-temporal and parietal cortex. However, children also recruit inferior frontal cortex during these numerical tasks to a much greater degree than adults. Our data lend additional support to an emerging consensus from adult neuroimaging, nonhuman primate neurophysiology, and computational modeling studies that a core neural system integrates notation-independent numerical representations throughout development but, early in development, higher-order brain mechanisms mediate this process.
引用
收藏
页码:2217 / 2229
页数:13
相关论文
共 69 条
[1]   Neural correlates of symbolic number processing in children and adults [J].
Ansari, D ;
Garcia, N ;
Lucas, E ;
Hamon, K ;
Dhital, B .
NEUROREPORT, 2005, 16 (16) :1769-1773
[2]   Effects of development and enculturation on number representation in the brain [J].
Ansari, Daniel .
NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE, 2008, 9 (04) :278-291
[3]   Age-related changes in the activation of the intraparietal sulcus during nonsymbolic magnitude processing: An event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging study [J].
Ansari, Daniel ;
Dhital, Bibek .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2006, 18 (11) :1820-1828
[4]   Abstract number and arithmetic in preschool children [J].
Barth, H ;
La Mont, K ;
Lipton, J ;
Spelke, ES .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2005, 102 (39) :14116-14121
[5]   The construction of large number representations in adults [J].
Barth, H ;
Kanwisher, N ;
Spelke, E .
COGNITION, 2003, 86 (03) :201-221
[6]   Infant brains detect arithmetic errors [J].
Berger, Andrea ;
Tzur, Gabriel ;
Posner, Michael I. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2006, 103 (33) :12649-12653
[7]   The development of ordinal numerical knowledge in infancy [J].
Brannon, EM .
COGNITION, 2002, 83 (03) :223-240
[8]   The development of ordinal numerical competence in young children [J].
Brannon, EM ;
Van de Walle, GA .
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 2001, 43 (01) :53-81
[9]   COMPARISONS OF DIGITS AND DOT PATTERNS [J].
BUCKLEY, PB ;
GILLMAN, CB .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1974, 103 (06) :1131-1136
[10]   Neural circuits subserving the retrieval and maintenance of abstract rules [J].
Bunge, SA ;
Kahn, I ;
Wallis, JD ;
Miller, EK ;
Wagner, AD .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2003, 90 (05) :3419-3428