AI Article Synopsis

  • A hypothesis suggests that all vertebrates have innate neuronal networks for processing numbers, with evidence primarily from human fetuses.
  • Researchers investigated this by observing zebrafish larvae, which have a developed nervous system shortly after hatching.
  • The study found that zebrafish larvae demonstrated a preference for greater numbers when exposed to varying quantities of vertical bars, indicating a genuine ability to process numerical information across different vertebrate species.

Article Abstract

An intriguing hypothesis to explain the ubiquity of numerical abilities is that all vertebrates are born with hardwired neuronal networks for processing numbers. To date, only studies on human foetuses have clearly supported this hypothesis. Zebrafish hatch 48-72 h after fertilisation with an embryonic nervous system, providing a unique opportunity for investigating this hypothesis. Here, we demonstrated that zebrafish larvae exposed to vertical bars at birth acquired an attraction for bar stimuli and we developed a numerical discrimination task based on this preference. When tested with a series of discriminations of increasing difficulty (1vs.4, 1vs.3, 1vs.2, and 2vs.4 bars), zebrafish larvae reliably selected the greater numerosity. The preference was significant when stimuli were matched for surface area, luminance, density, and convex hull, thereby suggesting a true capacity to process numerical information. Converging results from two phylogenetically distant species suggests that numerical abilities might be a hallmark feature of vertebrates' brains.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10036331PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-04595-7DOI Listing

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