4.5 Article

A neural basis for the visual sense of number and its development: A steady-state visual evoked potential study in children and adults

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue -, Pages 333-343

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dcn.2017.02.011

Keywords

Numerosity; Steady-state visual evoked potential; Child development; Visual cortex; Approximate number system

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While recent studies in adults have demonstrated the existence of a neural mechanism for a visual sense of number, little is known about its development and whether such a mechanism exists at young ages. In the current study, I introduce a novel steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) technique to objectively quantify early visual cortical sensitivity to numerical and non-numerical magnitudes of a dot array. I then examine this neural sensitivity to numerical magnitude in children between three and ten years of age and in college students. Children overall exhibit strong SSVEP sensitivity to numerical magnitude in the right occipital sites with negligible SSVEP sensitivity to non-numerical magnitudes, the pattern similar to what is observed in adults. However, a closer examination of age differences reveals that this selective neural sensitivity to numerical magnitude, which is close to absent in three-year-olds, increases steadily as a function of age, while there is virtually no neural sensitivity to other non-numerical magnitudes across these ages. These results demonstrate the emergence of a neural mechanism underlying direct perception of numerosity across early and middle childhood and provide a potential neural mechanistic explanation for the development of humans' primitive, non-verbal ability to comprehend number. (C) 2017 The Author. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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