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Finger Tracking Reveals the Covert Stages of Mental Arithmetic
Author(s) -
Pedro PinheiroChagas,
Dror Dotan,
Manuela Piazza,
Stanislas Dehaene
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
open mind
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2470-2986
DOI - 10.1162/opmi_a_00003
Subject(s) - operand , subtraction , arithmetic , sign (mathematics) , mathematics , number line , line (geometry) , mental arithmetic , handshake , computer science , covert , algorithm , mathematical analysis , overhead (engineering) , geometry , medicine , heart rate , linguistics , philosophy , blood pressure , radiology , operating system
We introduce a novel method capable of dissecting the succession of processing stages underlying mental arithmetic, thus revealing how two numbers are transformed into a third. We asked adults to point to the result of single-digit additions and subtractions on a number line, while their finger trajectory was constantly monitored. We found that the two operands are processed serially: the finger first points toward the larger operand, then slowly veers toward the correct result. This slow deviation unfolds proportionally to the size of the smaller operand, in both additions and subtractions. We also observed a transient operator effect: a plus sign attracted the finger to the right and a minus sign to the left and a transient activation of the absolute value of the subtrahend. These findings support a model whereby addition and subtraction are computed by a stepwise displacement on the mental number line, starting with the larger number and incrementally adding or subtracting the smaller number.

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