Abstract

Humans and animals appear to share a similar representation of number as an analog magnitude on an internal, subjective scale. Neurological and neurophysiological data suggest that posterior parietal cortex (PPC) is a critical component of the circuits that form the basis of numerical abilities in humans. Patients with parietal lesions are impaired in their ability to access the deep meaning of numbers. Acalculiac patients with inferior parietal damage often have difficulty performing arithmetic (2 + 4?) or number bisection (what is between 3 and 5?) tasks, but are able to recite multiplication tables and read or write numerals. Functional imaging studies of neurologically intact humans performing subtraction, number comparison, and non-verbal magnitude comparison tasks show activity in areas within the intraparietal sulcus (IPS). Taken together, clinical cases and imaging studies support a critical role for parietal cortex in the mental manipulation of numerical quantities. Further, responses of single PPC neurons in non-human primates are sensitive to the numerosity of visual stimuli independent of low-level stimulus qualities. When monkeys are trained to make explicit judgments about the numerical value of such stimuli, PPC neurons encode their cardinal numerical value; without such training PPC neurons appear to encode numerical magnitude in an analog fashion. Here we suggest that the spatial and integrative properties of PPC neurons contribute to their critical role in numerical cognition.

Highlights

  • Humans possess a deep understanding of the meaning of numbers, and the practical use of this abstract ability is ubiquitous

  • A wealth of research suggests that humans share with animals a representation of number as an analog magnitude on an internal, subjective, scaled “number line” that is less precise with increasing magnitude (Platt and Johnson, 1971; Whalen et al, 1999)

  • We take a broader view that the properties of numerical cognition evident from behavior emerge from the response properties of neurons in parieto-frontal circuitry, in which posterior parietal cortex (PPC) plays a crucial role

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Summary

Introduction

Humans possess a deep understanding of the meaning of numbers, and the practical use of this abstract ability is ubiquitous. Several lines of evidence using tests of non-symbolic numerical processing suggest number is innately represented on a compressed analog scale that supports ratiodependence in discriminations.

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