期刊文献+
共找到1篇文章
< 1 >
每页显示 20 50 100
Comparing children's Homo sapiens and chimpanzees' Pan troglodytes quantity judgments of sequentially presented sets of items
1
作者 Michael J. BERAN Julie S. JOHNSON-PYNN Christopher READY 《Current Zoology》 SCIE CAS CSCD 北大核心 2011年第4期419-420,421-428,共10页
We presented a quantity judgment task that involved comparing two sequentially presented sets of items to preschoolers and chimpanzees using nearly identical procedures that excluded verbal instructions to children. T... We presented a quantity judgment task that involved comparing two sequentially presented sets of items to preschoolers and chimpanzees using nearly identical procedures that excluded verbal instructions to children. Trial difficulty in this task reflected the ratio difference between sets of discrete items where larger ratios (e.g., 0.80 as from comparing 4 to 5) were more difficult than smaller ones (e.g., 0.50 as from comparing 4 to 8). Children also completed verbal-based tasks probing the relationskip between counting proficiency and performance on the quantity judgment task of sequentially presented identical sized items. Both species' performance was best when ratios between comparison sets were small regardless of set size in all types of tasks. Generally, chimpanzees and older children performed better than younger children except at larger ratios. Children's counting proficiency was not related to success in choosing the larger of two quantities of identical-sized items. These results indicate that chimpanzees and children share an approximate number sense that is reflected through analog magnitude estimation when comparing quantities [Current Zoology 57 (4): 419-428, 2011]. 展开更多
关键词 numerical cognition Quantity judgments CHILDREN CHIMPANZEES Pan troglodytes
原文传递
上一页 1 下一页 到第
使用帮助 返回顶部