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Regular articles

Judgement of discrete and continuous quantity in adults: Number counts!

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Pages 675-690 | Received 02 Nov 2010, Published online: 04 Nov 2011
 

Abstract

Three experiments involving a Stroop-like paradigm were conducted. In Experiment 1, adults received a number comparison task in which large sets of dots, orthogonally varying along a discrete dimension (number of dots) and a continuous dimension (cumulative area), were presented. Incongruent trials were processed more slowly and with less accuracy than congruent trials, suggesting that continuous dimensions such as cumulative area are automatically processed and integrated during a discrete quantity judgement task. Experiment 2, in which adults were asked to perform area comparison on the same stimuli, revealed the reciprocal interference from number on the continuous quantity judgements. Experiment 3, in which participants received both the number and area comparison tasks, confirmed the results of Experiments 1 and 2. Contrasting with earlier statements, the results support the view that number acts as a more salient cue than continuous dimensions in adults. Furthermore, the individual predisposition to automatically access approximate number representations was found to correlate significantly with adults' exact arithmetical skills.

Acknowledgments

The present work was partly supported by Concerted Research Action (ARC-06/11-342) funded by the Direction générale de l'Enseignement non obligatoire et de la Recherche scientifique–Communauté Française de Belgique.

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