Detection of intermodal numerical correspondences by human infants. Starkey, P, Spelke, E., & Gelman, R Science, 222(4620):179-81, 1983.
abstract   bibtex   
Infants prefer to look at an array of objects that corresponds in number to a sequence of sounds. In doing so, infants disregard the modality (visual or auditory) and type (object or event) of items presented. This finding indicates that infants possess a mechanism that enables them to obtain information about number.
@Article{Starkey1983,
  author   = {P Starkey and ES Spelke and R Gelman},
  journal  = {Science},
  title    = {Detection of intermodal numerical correspondences by human infants.},
  year     = {1983},
  number   = {4620},
  pages    = {179-81},
  volume   = {222},
  abstract = {Infants prefer to look at an array of objects that corresponds in
	number to a sequence of sounds. In doing so, infants disregard the
	modality (visual or auditory) and type (object or event) of items
	presented. This finding indicates that infants possess a mechanism
	that enables them to obtain information about number.},
  keywords = {Auditory Perception, Human, Infant, Perception, Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S., P.H.S., Visual Perception, 6623069},
}

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