The performance of 4-and 5-year-old children and rhesus monkeys was compared using a computerized task for quantity assessment. Participants first learned two quantity anchor values and then responded to intermediate values by classifying them as either similar to the large anchor or the small anchor. Of primary interest was an assessment of where the point of subjective equality (PSE) occurred for each species across four different sets of anchors to determine whether the PSE occurred at the arithmetic mean or the geometric mean. Both species produced PSEs that were closer to the geometric mean for three of four anchor sets. This indicates that monkeys and children access either a logarithmic scale for quantity representation or a linear scale that is subject to scalar variability, both of which are consistent with Weber's law and representation of quantity that takes the form of analog magnitudes. KeywordsQuantity Judgments; Representational Scale; Children; Monkeys; Bisection TaskThe quantity discriminations made by many species are restricted in their accuracy on the basis of the ratio between those sets (e.g., Barth, Kanwisher, & Spelke, 2003;Beran, 2007;Beran, Taglialatela, Flemming, James, & Washburn, 2006;Brannon, Cantlon, & Terrace, 2006;Brannon & Terrace, 2000;Call, 2000;Huntley-Fenner, 2001). Comparisons with larger ratios (as determined by dividing the smaller quantity by the larger quantity) lead to lower performance levels, even when the distance between sets is constant (e.g., 8 versus 10 is more difficult than 2 versus 4). This suggests that an analog magnitude system produces discriminable representations of sets, and this system is consistent with Weber's law, which states that discrimination of sets becomes more difficult for a fixed difference as the magnitude of those sets increases.Correspondence to: Michael Beran, Language Research Center, Georgia State University, University Plaza, Atlanta, GA 30303, Telephone -404-244-2469, Fax -404-244-5829, E-mail -mjberan@yahoo.com. Publisher's Disclaimer: This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final citable form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. Evidence for discrimination performance being modulated by Weber's Law comes from differing sources. One task, used primarily with nonhuman primates, involves judgments between two sets of items (e.g., Beran, 2004;Brannon & Terrace, 2000;Call, 2000; Judge, Evans, & Vias, 2005). This task also sometimes is used with human children (e.g., Brannon & Van de Walle, 2001; Feigenson, Carey, & Hauser, 2003). The second task is the bisection task that has been used extensively with rats and pigeons (e.g., Emmerton & Renner, 2006;Fetterm...
We presented a quantity judgment task that involved comparing two sequentially presented sets of items to preschoolers and chimpanzees using nearly identical procedures that excluded verbal instructions to children. Trial difficulty in this task reflected the ratio difference between sets of discrete items where larger ratios (e.g., 0.80 as from comparing 4 to 5) were more difficult than smaller ones (e.g., 0.50 as from comparing 4 to 8). Children also completed verbal-based tasks probing the relationship between counting proficiency and performance on the quantity judgment task of sequentially presented identical sized items. Both species' performance was best when ratios between comparison sets were small regardless of set size in all types of tasks. Generally, chimpanzees and older children performed better than younger children except at larger ratios. Children's counting proficiency was not related to success in choosing the larger of two quantities of identical-sized items. These results indicate that chimpanzees and children share an approximate number sense that is reflected through analog magnitude estimation when comparing quantities [Current Zoology 57 (4): [419][420][421][422][423][424][425][426][427][428] 2011].
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