De Smedt Bert, Reynvoet Bert, Swillen Ann, Verschaffel Lieven, Boets Bart, Ghesquière Pol
Centre for Disability, Special Needs Education, and Child Care, University of Leuven, Belgium.
Cortex. 2009 Feb;45(2):177-88. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2007.06.003. Epub 2008 Feb 1.
It has been suggested that mathematical disabilities (MD) emerge as a consequence of impairments in basic number processing skills. The aim of the present study was to investigate basic number processing skills in children with Velo-Cardio-Facial Syndrome (VCFS), a common genetic disorder with a high prevalence of MD, and to examine whether these basic low-level skills account for their performance in single-digit arithmetic. Twenty-five children with VCFS and 25 individually matched controls (age range: 6-12 years) participated. They all completed two basic number processing tasks (number reading, number comparison) and three single-digit arithmetic tasks comprising addition, subtraction and multiplication. In the latter tasks, strategy use was recorded next to accuracy and speed. Our data revealed that children with VCFS were significantly slower than controls on number comparison but not on number reading. Analysis of the single-digit arithmetic data revealed that children with VCFS performed more poorly than controls on large addition and subtraction problems. Both groups did not differ on multiplication and small additions and subtractions. At the strategy level, children with VCFS were significantly slower in executing backup strategies in addition and subtraction, but showed preserved retrieval of arithmetic facts. Taken together, children with VCFS show a consistent pattern of deficits at the level of number representations, arithmetic operations and strategy use, which suggests an impaired quantity subsystem in terms of Dehaene et al.'s model (2003). Most importantly, the correlational analyses showed that basic number processing skills directly accounted for single-digit arithmetic performance and strategy use in the children of the present study.
有人认为,数学障碍(MD)是基本数字处理技能受损的结果。本研究的目的是调查患有心脏-面部综合征(VCFS)的儿童的基本数字处理技能,VCFS是一种常见的遗传性疾病,MD的患病率很高,并检查这些基本的低水平技能是否能解释他们在一位数算术中的表现。25名患有VCFS的儿童和25名个体匹配的对照组儿童(年龄范围:6至12岁)参与了研究。他们都完成了两项基本数字处理任务(数字阅读、数字比较)和三项一位数算术任务,包括加法、减法和乘法。在后面这些任务中,除了记录准确性和速度外,还记录了策略的使用情况。我们的数据显示,患有VCFS的儿童在数字比较方面明显比对照组慢,但在数字阅读方面则不然。对一位数算术数据的分析显示,患有VCFS的儿童在大的加法和减法问题上的表现比对照组差。两组在乘法以及小的加法和减法上没有差异。在策略层面,患有VCFS的儿童在执行加法和减法的备用策略时明显较慢,但在算术事实的检索方面表现正常。综上所述,患有VCFS的儿童在数字表征、算术运算和策略使用层面呈现出一致的缺陷模式,这表明根据德阿纳等人(2003年)的模型,其数量子系统受损。最重要的是,相关性分析表明,基本数字处理技能直接影响了本研究中儿童的一位数算术表现和策略使用。