Numerosity processing is context driven even in the subitizing range: An fMRI study
نویسندگان
چکیده
Numerical judgments are involved in almost every aspect of our daily life. They are carried out so efficiently that they are often considered to be automatic and innate. However, numerosity of non-symbolic stimuli is highly correlated with its continuous properties (e.g., density, area), and so it is hard to determine whether numerosity and continuous properties rely on the same mechanism. Here we examined the behavioral and neuronal mechanisms underlying such judgments. We scanned subjects' hemodynamic responses to a numerosity comparison task and to a surface area comparison task. In these tasks, numerical and continuous magnitudes could be either congruent or incongruent. Behaviorally, an interaction between the order of the tasks and the relevant dimension modulated the congruency effects. Continuous magnitudes always interfered with numerosity comparison. Numerosity, on the other hand, interfered with the surface area comparison only when participants began with the numerosity task. Hemodynamic activity showed that context (induced by task order) determined the neuronal pathways in which the dimensions were processed. Starting with the numerosity task led to enhanced activity in the right hemisphere, while starting with the continuous task led to enhanced left hemisphere activity. Continuous magnitudes processing relied on activation of the frontal eye field and the post-central gyrus. Processing of numerosities, on the other hand, relied on deactivation of these areas, suggesting active suppression of the continuous dimension. Accordingly, we suggest that numerosities, even in the subitizing range, are not always processed automatically; their processing depends on context and task demands.
منابع مشابه
Linking visual attention and number processing in the brain: the role of the right temporo-parietal junction in small and large non-symbolic number comparison
Note: The first two authors contributed equally to this study and are listed in alphabetical order 2 Abstract There exists a long standing debate regarding whether small and large numerosities engage different networks of processing. The ability to rapidly enumerate small (1-4) numerosities is referred to as 'subitizing' and is thought to be qualitatively different from large numerosity process...
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عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 77 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2015