Abstract

The existence of a generalized magnitude system in the human mind and brain has been studied extensively but remains elusive because it has not been clearly defined. Here we show that one possibility is the representation of relative magnitudes via ratio calculations: ratios are a naturally dimensionless or abstract quantity that could qualify as a common currency for magnitudes measured on vastly different psychophysical scales and in different sensory modalities like size, number, duration, and loudness. In a series of demonstrations based on comparisons of item sequences, we demonstrate that subjects spontaneously use knowledge of inter-item ratios within and across sensory modalities and across magnitude domains to rate sequences as more or less similar on a sliding scale. Moreover, they rate ratio-preserved sequences as more similar to each other than sequences in which only ordinal relations are preserved, indicating that subjects are aware of differences in levels of relative-magnitude information preservation. The ubiquity of this ability across many different magnitude pairs, even those sharing no sensory information, suggests a highly general code that could qualify as a candidate for a generalized magnitude representation.

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