The association of brightness with number/duration in human newborns.

Human neonates spontaneously associate changes in magnitude across the dimensions of number, length, and duration. Do these particular associations generalize to other pairs of magnitudes in the same way at birth, or do they reflect an early predisposition to expect specific relations between spatia...

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Main Authors: Cory D Bonn, Maria-Eirini Netskou, Arlette Streri, Maria Dolores de Hevia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223192
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spelling doaj-a6d7865f5e984a4da943e4d11598402a2021-03-03T21:07:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011410e022319210.1371/journal.pone.0223192The association of brightness with number/duration in human newborns.Cory D BonnMaria-Eirini NetskouArlette StreriMaria Dolores de HeviaHuman neonates spontaneously associate changes in magnitude across the dimensions of number, length, and duration. Do these particular associations generalize to other pairs of magnitudes in the same way at birth, or do they reflect an early predisposition to expect specific relations between spatial, temporal, and numerical representations? To begin to answer this question, we investigated how strongly newborns associated auditory sequences changing in number/duration with visual objects changing in levels of brightness. We tested forty-eight newborn infants in one of three, bimodal stimulus conditions in which auditory numbers/durations increased or decreased from a familiarization trial to the two test trials. Auditory numbers/durations were paired with visual objects in familiarization that remained the same on one test trial but changed in luminance/contrast or shape on the other. On average, results indicated that newborns looked longer when changes in brightness accompanied the number/duration change as compared to no change, a preference that was most consistent when the brightness change was congruent with the number/duration change. For incongruent changes, this preference depended on trial order. Critically, infants showed no preference for a shape change over no shape change, indicating that infants likely treated brightness differently than a generic feature. Though this performance pattern is somewhat similar to previously documented associations, these findings suggest that cross-magnitude associations among number, length, and duration may be more specialized at birth, rather than emerge gradually from postnatal experience or maturation.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223192
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cory D Bonn
Maria-Eirini Netskou
Arlette Streri
Maria Dolores de Hevia
spellingShingle Cory D Bonn
Maria-Eirini Netskou
Arlette Streri
Maria Dolores de Hevia
The association of brightness with number/duration in human newborns.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Cory D Bonn
Maria-Eirini Netskou
Arlette Streri
Maria Dolores de Hevia
author_sort Cory D Bonn
title The association of brightness with number/duration in human newborns.
title_short The association of brightness with number/duration in human newborns.
title_full The association of brightness with number/duration in human newborns.
title_fullStr The association of brightness with number/duration in human newborns.
title_full_unstemmed The association of brightness with number/duration in human newborns.
title_sort association of brightness with number/duration in human newborns.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Human neonates spontaneously associate changes in magnitude across the dimensions of number, length, and duration. Do these particular associations generalize to other pairs of magnitudes in the same way at birth, or do they reflect an early predisposition to expect specific relations between spatial, temporal, and numerical representations? To begin to answer this question, we investigated how strongly newborns associated auditory sequences changing in number/duration with visual objects changing in levels of brightness. We tested forty-eight newborn infants in one of three, bimodal stimulus conditions in which auditory numbers/durations increased or decreased from a familiarization trial to the two test trials. Auditory numbers/durations were paired with visual objects in familiarization that remained the same on one test trial but changed in luminance/contrast or shape on the other. On average, results indicated that newborns looked longer when changes in brightness accompanied the number/duration change as compared to no change, a preference that was most consistent when the brightness change was congruent with the number/duration change. For incongruent changes, this preference depended on trial order. Critically, infants showed no preference for a shape change over no shape change, indicating that infants likely treated brightness differently than a generic feature. Though this performance pattern is somewhat similar to previously documented associations, these findings suggest that cross-magnitude associations among number, length, and duration may be more specialized at birth, rather than emerge gradually from postnatal experience or maturation.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223192
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