Science 1999 May
Dehaene S, Spelke E, Pinel P, Stanescu R, Tsivkin S
Abstract
Does the human capacity for mathematical intuition depend on linguistic competence or on visuo-spatial representations? A series of behavioral and brain-imaging experiments provides evidence for both sources. Exact arithmetic is acquired in a language-specific format, transfers poorly to a different language or to novel facts, and recruits networks involved in word-association processes. In contrast, approximate arithmetic shows language independence, relies on a sense of numerical magnitudes, a
...[more]nd recruits bilateral areas of the parietal lobes involved in visuo-spatial processing. Mathematical intuition may emerge from the interplay of these brain systems.
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Mesh Headings:
Adult, Brain Mapping, Evoked Potentials, Female, Frontal Lobe, Humans, Intuition, Language, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Mathematics, Parietal Lobe, Thinking