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Título
Disentangling the Mechanisms of Symbolic Number Processing in Adults’ Mathematics and Arithmetic Achievement
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Arithmetic
Number processing
Individual differences
Magnitude representation
Clasificación UNESCO
6106 Psicología Experimental
Fecha de publicación
2019
Editor
Wiley
Citación
Orrantia J, Muñez D, Matilla L, Sanchez R, San Romualdo S, Verschaffel L. (2019) Disentangling the Mechanisms of Symbolic Number Processing in Adults' Mathematics and Arithmetic Achievement. Cogn Sci.;43(1). doi: 10.1111/cogs.12711. PMID: 30648799.
Resumen
[EN]A growing body of research has shown that symbolic number processing relates to individual differences
in mathematics. However, it remains unclear which mechanisms of symbolic number processing
are crucial—accessing underlying magnitude representation of symbols (i.e., symbol-magnitude associations),
processing relative order of symbols (i.e., symbol-symbol associations), or processing of symbols
per se. To address this question, in this study adult participants performed a dots-number word matching
task—thought to be a measure of symbol-magnitude associations (numerical magnitude processing)
—a numeral-ordering task that focuses on symbol-symbol associations (numerical order processing),
and a digit-number word matching task targeting symbolic processing per se. Results showed that both
numerical magnitude and order processing were uniquely related to arithmetic achievement, beyond the
effects of domain-general factors (intellectual ability, working memory, inhibitory control, and nonnumerical
ordering). Importantly, results were different when a general measure of mathematics
achievement was considered. Those mechanisms of symbolic number processing did not contribute to
math achievement. Furthermore, a path analysis revealed that numerical magnitude and order processing
might draw on a common mechanism. Each process explained a portion of the relation of the other
with arithmetic (but not with a general measure of math achievement). These findings are consistent
with the notion that adults’ arithmetic skills build upon symbol-magnitude associations, and they highlight
the effects that different math measures have in the study of numerical cognition.
URI
ISSN
0364-0213
DOI
10.1111/COGS.12711
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