Brain & Mind Institute, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
Center on Teaching and Learning, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, USA.
Dev Sci. 2022 May;25(3):e13194. doi: 10.1111/desc.13194. Epub 2021 Dec 11.
Children's ability to discriminate nonsymbolic number (e.g., the number of items in a set) is a commonly studied predictor of later math skills. Number discrimination improves throughout development, but what drives this improvement is unclear. Competing theories suggest that it may be due to a sharpening numerical representation or an improved ability to pay attention to number and filter out non-numerical information. We investigate this issue by studying change in children's performance (N = 65) on a nonsymbolic number comparison task, where children decide which of two dot arrays has more dots, from the middle to the end of 1st grade (mean age at time 1 = 6.85 years old). In this task, visual properties of the dot arrays such as surface area are either congruent (the more numerous array has more surface area) or incongruent. Children rely more on executive functions during incongruent trials, so improvements in each congruency condition provide information about the underlying cognitive mechanisms. We found that accuracy rates increased similarly for both conditions, indicating a sharpening sense of numerical magnitude, not simply improved attention to the numerical task dimension. Symbolic number skills predicted change in congruent trials, but executive function did not predict change in either condition. No factor predicted change in math achievement. Together, these findings suggest that nonsymbolic number processing undergoes development related to existing symbolic number skills, development that appears not to be driving math gains during this period. Children's ability to discriminate nonsymbolic number improves throughout development. Competing theories suggest improvement due to sharpening magnitude representations or changes in attention and inhibition. The current study investigates change in nonsymbolic number comparison performance during first grade and whether symbolic number skills, math skills, or executive function predict change. Children's performance increased across visual control conditions (i.e., congruent or incongruent with number) suggesting an overall sharpening of number processing. Symbolic number skills predicted change in nonsymbolic number comparison performance.
儿童辨别非符号数字(例如,一组物品的数量)的能力是预测后期数学技能的常用指标。数字辨别能力在整个发展过程中都在提高,但提高的原因尚不清楚。竞争理论表明,这可能是由于数字表示的锐化或更好地关注数字和过滤非数字信息的能力提高。我们通过研究儿童在非符号数字比较任务中的表现变化来研究这个问题,在这个任务中,孩子们判断两个点数组中哪一个有更多的点,从一年级中期到结束(第一次测试的平均年龄为 6.85 岁)。在这个任务中,点数组的视觉属性(如表面积)是一致的(数量较多的数组具有更大的表面积)或不一致的。儿童在不一致的试验中更多地依赖执行功能,因此在每种一致性条件下的改进都提供了关于潜在认知机制的信息。我们发现,两种条件下的准确率都有类似的提高,这表明数字大小的感知锐化,而不仅仅是对数字任务维度的注意力提高。符号数字技能预测了一致条件下的变化,但执行功能并不能预测两种条件下的变化。没有任何因素可以预测数学成绩的变化。总的来说,这些发现表明,非符号数字处理的发展与现有的符号数字技能有关,这种发展似乎不会在这段时间内推动数学的提高。儿童辨别非符号数字的能力在整个发展过程中都在提高。竞争理论表明,由于数量表示的锐化或注意力和抑制的变化,这种能力会提高。本研究调查了一年级期间非符号数字比较表现的变化,以及符号数字技能、数学技能或执行功能是否预测变化。在视觉控制条件下(即与数字一致或不一致),儿童的表现都有所提高,这表明数字处理的整体锐化。符号数字技能预测了非符号数字比较表现的变化。