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Published 2011 | Published
Journal Article Open

Fast saccades toward numbers: Simple number comparisons can be made in as little as 230 ms

Abstract

Visual psychophysicists have recently developed tools to measure the maximal speed at which the brain can accurately carry out different types of computations (H. Kirchner & S. J. Thorpe, 2006). We use this methodology to measure the maximal speed with which individuals can make magnitude comparisons between two single-digit numbers. We find that individuals make such comparisons with high accuracy in 306 ms on average and are able to perform above chance in as little as 230 ms. We also find that maximal speeds are similar for "larger than" and "smaller than" number comparisons and in a control task that simply requires subjects to identify the number in a number–letter pair. The results suggest that the brain contains dedicated processes involved in implementing basic number comparisons that can be deployed in parallel with processes involved in low-level visual processing.

Additional Information

© 2011 ARVO. Received September 17, 2010; published April 6, 2011. We would like to thank Alex Huth, Rufin VanRullen, two reviewers, and the editor for their helpful comments. This work was funded by the Tamagawa Global Center of Excellence (MM), the Mathers Foundation, ONR, DARPA, NSF, and the WCU Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, R31-2008-000-10008-0 (CK).

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