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Commonalities for Numerical and Continuous Quantity Skills at Temporo-parietal Junction
Author(s) -
Marinella Cappelletti,
Rebecca Chamberlain,
Elliot Freeman,
Ryota Kanai,
Brian Butterworth,
Cathy J. Price,
Geraint Rees
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of cognitive neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.597
H-Index - 214
eISSN - 1530-8898
pISSN - 0898-929X
DOI - 10.1162/jocn_a_00546
Subject(s) - psychology , number sense , dyscalculia , numerical cognition , parietal lobe , cognitive psychology , contrast (vision) , brain size , neuroscience , population , developmental psychology , cognition , cognitive science , artificial intelligence , computer science , medicine , reading (process) , political science , magnetic resonance imaging , law , radiology , dyslexia , demography , sociology
How do our abilities to process number and other continuous quantities such as time and space relate to each other? Recent evidence suggests that these abilities share common magnitude processing and neural resources, although other findings also highlight the role of dimension-specific processes. To further characterize the relation between number, time, and space, we first examined them in a population with a developmental numerical dysfunction (developmental dyscalculia) and then assessed the extent to which these abilities correlated both behaviorally and anatomically in numerically normal participants. We found that (1) participants with dyscalculia showed preserved continuous quantity processing and (2) in numerically normal adults, numerical and continuous quantity abilities were at least partially dissociated both behaviorally and anatomically. Specifically, gray matter volume correlated with both measures of numerical and continuous quantity processing in the right TPJ; in contrast, individual differences in number proficiency were associated with gray matter volume in number-specific cortical regions in the right parietal lobe. Together, our new converging evidence of selective numerical impairment and of number-specific brain areas at least partially distinct from common magnitude areas suggests that the human brain is equipped with different ways of quantifying the outside world.

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