Publication | Closed Access
An Attentional Model for the Conceptual Construction of Units and Number
115
Citations
4
References
1981
Year
Concept FormationPsycholinguisticsCognitionAttentionSemanticsSensory SystemsVisual Cognitive NeuroscienceSocial SciencesMathematical PsychologyMathematics EducationSensory Studies (Sensory Anthropology)Steady StateVisual CognitionSensory NeuroscienceNumerical CompetenceCognitive NeurosciencePsychophysicsMultisensory IntegrationSensory Studies (Occupational Therapy)Perception SystemHealth SciencesConceptual ConstructionCognitive ScienceSemantic InterpretationUnitary Sensory ObjectsNumeracyPhilosophy Of LanguageCognitive DynamicsSensory-motor SystemAttentional ModelNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemLinguistics
A theoretical model is proposed that explicates the generation of conceptual structures from unitary sensory objects to abstract constructs that satisfy the criteria generally stipulated for concepts of “number”: independence from sensory properties, unity of composites consisting of units, and potential numerosity. The model is based on the assumption that attention operates not as a steady state but as a pulselike phenomenon that can, but need not, be focused on sensory signals in the central nervous system. Such a view of attention is compatible with recent findings in the neurophysiology of perception and provides, in conjunction with Piaget's postulate of empirical and reflective abstraction, a novel approach to the analysis of concepts that seem indispensable for the development of numerical operations.
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