Nys Julie, Content Alain
Laboratoire Cognition, Langage & Développement (LCLD), Université Libre de Bruxelles, Av. Roosevelt, 50/CP 191, B - 1050 Brussels, Belgium.
Can J Exp Psychol. 2010 Sep;64(3):215-20. doi: 10.1037/a0020767.
Young adults were asked to solve two-digit addition problems and to say aloud the result of each calculation step to allow the identification of computation strategies. We manipulated the position of the largest addend (e.g., 25 + 48 vs. 48 + 25) to assess whether strategies are modulated by magnitude characteristics. With some strategies, participants demonstrated a clear preference to take the largest addend as the starting point for the calculation. Hence, rather than applying strategies in an inflexible manner, participants evaluated and compared the operands before proceeding to calculation. Further, mathematically skilled participants tended to use those magnitude-based strategies more often than less skilled ones. The findings demonstrate that magnitude information plays a role in complex arithmetic by guiding the process of strategy selection, and possibly more so for mathematically skilled participants.
研究人员要求年轻人解决两位数加法问题,并大声说出每一步计算的结果,以便识别计算策略。我们操纵最大加数的位置(例如,25 + 48 与 48 + 25),以评估策略是否受到数量特征的调节。在某些策略中,参与者表现出明显倾向于将最大加数作为计算起点。因此,参与者并非以僵化的方式应用策略,而是在进行计算之前对操作数进行评估和比较。此外,数学能力强的参与者比能力较弱的参与者更倾向于使用那些基于数量的策略。研究结果表明,数量信息在复杂算术运算中通过指导策略选择过程发挥作用,对数学能力强的参与者可能更是如此。