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Babies Who Can’t yet Count, May Still Understand Numbers!

Babies Who Can’t yet Count, May Still Understand Numbers!

IANS
Fit
Published:
New study shows that babies may be able to gauge numbers way before they can count.
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New study shows that babies may be able to gauge numbers way before they can count.
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Babies who are years away from being able to say 'one', 'two', and 'three' actually already have a sense of what counting means, said a new study.

For the study published in the journal Developmental Science, the researchers worked with 14 and 18-month-old infants.

The babies watched as toys, little dogs or cars, were hidden in a box that they couldn't see inside of, but could reach into.

Sometimes the researchers counted each toy aloud as they dropped them into the box, saying, 'Look! One, two, three, four -- four dogs!' Other times the researchers simply dropped each toy into the box, saying, 'This, this, this and this -- these dogs'.

Without counting, the babies had a hard time remembering that the box held four things.

They tended to become distracted after the researchers pulled just one out -- as if there was nothing else to see. But when the toys were counted, the babies clearly expected more than one to be pulled from the box.

According to the study, they didn't remember the exact but they did remember the approximate number.

This story was auto-published from a syndicated feed. No part of the story has been edited by FIT.)

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