A research project found that deaf people who had not learned a language containing symbols used for counting were unable to comprehend any number greater than three.
Experts said the reason was that they had not studied the familiar ‘count list’ of one to ten that most people are taught when they are young.
Children learn such a sequence even before they know what it means and it stays hardwired into their brain for the rest of their lives.
Words are key: Deaf people who had not learned a language containing symbols used for counting were unable to comprehend any number greater than three, research found
The study is the first to identify the link between language and numeracy and was carried out by researchers at the University of Chicago.
They studied deaf people from Nicaragua who had created their own unique sign language to talk to one another.
These so-called ‘homesigners’ did have numbers in their culture including a monetary system, so any differences they exhibited would have to solely be due to language.
The first test involved asking them to answer which had the most value out of a 10-unit, 20-unit and 100-unit coin.
As they were familiar with their money, the test subjects were able to answer each question correctly.
Things changed when were shown an animated video in which numbers played a key part, such as a story with ten sheep in a pen.
The researchers then asked the subjects to retell the story to a friend using their ‘homesigns’ but as the numbers got bigger, they had increasing difficulty in making an accurate gesture with their hands.
Finally, the test subjects were shown cards with different numbers of items on them and asked to give a gesture that represented the number of items.
The homesigners were accurate only up to the number three.
The research team concluded that the problem understanding large numbers was not due to an inability to communicate them, but because they could not think about them.
Susan Goldin-Meadow, a professor in psychology at Chicago University, said: ‘It's not just the vocabulary words that matter, but understanding the relationships that underlie the words - the fact that "eight" is one more than "seven" and one less than "nine".
‘Without having a set of number words to guide them, deaf homesigners in the study failed to understand that numbers build on each other in value.’
Her colleague Elizabeth Spaepen added that the homesigners were not ‘wildly off’ in their guesses but that there was definitely an issue connected to their language.
‘They can approximate quantities, but they don't have a way of getting to the exact number,’ she said.
The study was published in the journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. ( dailymail.co.uk )
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