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Pierre Pica

Researcher at University of Paris

Publications -  47
Citations -  3127

Pierre Pica is an academic researcher from University of Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lexicon & Approximate number system. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 47 publications receiving 2923 citations. Previous affiliations of Pierre Pica include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte.

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Exact and Approximate Arithmetic in an Amazonian Indigene Group

TL;DR: This work studied numerical cognition in speakers of Mundurukú, an Amazonian language with a very small lexicon of number words, and implies a distinction between a nonverbal system of number approximation and a language-based counting system for exact number and arithmetic.
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Log or Linear? Distinct Intuitions of the Number Scale in Western and Amazonian Indigene Cultures

TL;DR: The Mundurucu, an Amazonian indigene group with a reduced numerical lexicon and little or no formal education, mapped symbolic and nonsymbolic numbers onto a logarithmic scale, whereas Western adults used linear mapping with small or symbolic numbers and logarithsmic mapping when numbers were presented nonsymbolically under conditions that discouraged counting.
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Core Knowledge of Geometry in an Amazonian Indigene Group

TL;DR: The Mundurukú children and adults spontaneously made use of basic geometric concepts such as points, lines, parallelism, or right angles to detect intruders in simple pictures, and they used distance, angle, and sense relationships in geometrical maps to locate hidden objects.
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Education Enhances the Acuity of the Nonverbal Approximate Number System

TL;DR: It is found that education significantly enhances the acuity with which sets of concrete objects are estimated, and it is hypothesized that symbolic and nonsymbolic numerical thinking mutually enhance one another over the course of mathematics instruction.

On the Nature of the Reflexivization Cycle

Pierre Pica
TL;DR: In this paper, it is argued that the behavior of long distance reflexives derives from the properties of abstratc movement at the level of Logical Form, and that the behaviour of reflexives can be explained by the presence/vs absence of features.