Bull Rebecca, Blatto-Vallee Gary, Fabich Megan
School of Psychology, William Guild Building, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland AB24 2UB, UK.
J Deaf Stud Deaf Educ. 2006 Summer;11(3):289-302. doi: 10.1093/deafed/enj038. Epub 2006 Apr 6.
This study examines basic number processing (subitizing, automaticity, and magnitude representation) as the possible underpinning of mathematical difficulties often evidenced in deaf adults. Hearing and deaf participants completed tasks to assess the automaticity with which magnitude information was activated and retrieved from long-term memory (using a Stroop-like paradigm to assess congruity effects), the representational format of magnitude information (by analysis of distance and Spatial Numerical Association of Response Codes effects), and the ability to rapidly enumerate small sets (subitizing). Both groups showed distance effects taken to indicate the use of a visual-spatial analog number line representing approximate quantity. Furthermore, both groups showed similar patterns of performance on the subitizing tasks and showed similar amounts of interference in an analysis of congruity effects. This is taken as evidence against the notion that idiosyncratic differences in basic number processing account for mathematical difficulties experienced by deaf individuals.
本研究考察了基本数字处理(即一眼识数、自动性和数量表征),它可能是成年聋人常出现的数学困难的潜在原因。听力正常和失聪的参与者完成了多项任务,以评估数量信息从长期记忆中被激活和提取的自动性(使用类似斯特鲁普范式来评估一致性效应)、数量信息的表征形式(通过分析距离和反应编码的空间数字关联效应),以及快速枚举小集合的能力(一眼识数)。两组都表现出距离效应,这表明他们使用了一条视觉空间模拟数字线来表示近似数量。此外,两组在一眼识数任务上表现出相似的模式,并且在一致性效应分析中表现出相似程度的干扰。这被视为反对如下观点的证据:基本数字处理中的特殊差异是导致聋人数学困难的原因。