DeWolf Melissa, Grounds Margaret A, Bassok Miriam, Holyoak Keith J
Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles.
Department of Psychology, University of Washington.
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 2014 Feb;40(1):71-82. doi: 10.1037/a0032916. Epub 2013 Jun 10.
An important issue in understanding mathematical cognition involves the similarities and differences between the magnitude representations associated with various types of rational numbers. For single-digit integers, evidence indicates that magnitudes are represented as analog values on a mental number line, such that magnitude comparisons are made more quickly and accurately as the numerical distance between numbers increases (the distance effect). Evidence concerning a distance effect for compositional numbers (e.g., multidigit whole numbers, fractions and decimals) is mixed. We compared the patterns of response times and errors for college students in magnitude comparison tasks across closely matched sets of rational numbers (e.g., 22/37, 0.595, 595). In Experiment 1, a distance effect was found for both fractions and decimals, but response times were dramatically slower for fractions than for decimals. Experiments 2 and 3 compared performance across fractions, decimals, and 3-digit integers. Response patterns for decimals and integers were extremely similar but, as in Experiment 1, magnitude comparisons based on fractions were dramatically slower, even when the decimals varied in precision (i.e., number of place digits) and could not be compared in the same way as multidigit integers (Experiment 3). Our findings indicate that comparisons of all three types of numbers exhibit a distance effect, but that processing often involves strategic focus on components of numbers. Fractions impose an especially high processing burden due to their bipartite (a/b) structure. In contrast to the other number types, the magnitude values associated with fractions appear to be less precise, and more dependent on explicit calculation.
理解数学认知中的一个重要问题涉及与各种有理数类型相关的数量表征之间的异同。对于个位数整数,有证据表明数量在心理数字线上被表征为类似值,这样随着数字之间数值距离的增加,数量比较会更快且更准确地进行(距离效应)。关于组合数(例如多位数整数、分数和小数)的距离效应的证据并不一致。我们比较了大学生在对紧密匹配的有理数集(例如22/37、0.595、595)进行数量比较任务时的反应时间和错误模式。在实验1中,分数和小数都发现了距离效应,但分数的反应时间比小数慢得多。实验2和3比较了分数、小数和三位数整数的表现。小数和整数的反应模式极其相似,但与实验1一样,基于分数的数量比较要慢得多,即使小数在精度(即位数)上有所不同,且不能像多位数整数那样进行比较(实验3)。我们的研究结果表明,所有三种数字类型的比较都表现出距离效应,但处理过程通常涉及对数字组成部分的策略性关注。分数由于其二分结构(a/b)带来了特别高的处理负担。与其他数字类型相比,与分数相关的数量值似乎不太精确,并且更依赖于明确的计算。