Subitizing reflects visuo-spatial object individuation capacity |
| |
Authors: | Piazza Manuela Fumarola Antonia Chinello Alessandro Melcher David |
| |
Affiliation: | aCenter for Mind/Brain Sciences, University of Trento, Italy;bDepartment of Cognitive Sciences, University of Trento, Italy;cINSERM, U562, Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit, Gif/Yvette, France;dDepartment of Psychology “Gaetano Kanizsa”, University of Trieste, Italy |
| |
Abstract: | Subitizing is the immediate apprehension of the exact number of items in small sets. Despite more than a 100 years of research around this phenomenon, its nature and origin are still unknown. One view posits that it reflects a number estimation process common for small and large sets, which precision decreases as the number of items increases, according to Weber’s law. Another view proposes that it reflects a non-numerical mechanism of visual indexing of multiple objects in parallel that is limited in capacity. In a previous research we have gathered evidence against the Weberian estimation hypothesis. Here we provide first direct evidence for the alternative object indexing hypothesis, and show that subitizing reflects a domain general mechanism shared with other tasks that require multiple object individuation. |
| |
Keywords: | Subitizing Visuo-spatial working memory Visuo-spatial attention Capacity limits Individuation |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|