Alatorre-Cruz Graciela C, Downs Heather, Hagood Darcy, Sorensen Seth T, Williams D Keith, Larson-Prior Linda J
Department of Pediatrics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, United States.
Arkansas Children's Nutrition Center, Little Rock, AR, United States.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2022 Mar 10;16:760234. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2022.760234. eCollection 2022.
Preadolescence is an important period for the consolidation of certain arithmetic facts, and the development of problem-solving strategies. Obese subjects seem to have poorer academic performance in math than their normal-weight peers, suggesting a negative effect of obesity on math skills in critical developmental periods. To test this hypothesis, event-related potentials (ERPs) were collected during a delayed-verification math task using simple addition and subtraction problems in obese [above 95th body mass index (BMI) percentile] and non-obese (between 5th and 90th BMI percentile) preteens with different levels of math skill; thirty-one with low math skills (14 obese, mean BMI = 26.40, 9.79 years old; 17 non-obese, BMI = 17.45, 9.76 years old) and thirty-one with high math skills (15 obese, BMI = 26.90, 9.60 years old; 16 non-obese, BMI = 17.13, 9.63 years old). No significant differences between weight groups were observed in task accuracy regardless of their mathematical skill level. For ERPs, electrophysiological differences were found only in the subtraction condition; participants with obesity showed an electrophysiologic pattern associated with a reduced ability to allocate attention resources regardless of their math skill level, these differences were characterized by longer P300 latency than their normal-weight peers. Moreover, the participants with obesity with high math skills displayed hypoactivity in left superior parietal lobule compared with their normal-weight peers. Additionally, obese preteens with low math skills displayed smaller arithmetic N400 amplitude than non-obese participants, reflecting difficulties in retrieving visual, semantic, and lexical information about numbers. We conclude that participants with obesity are less able than their normal-weight peers to deploy their attention regardless of their behavioral performance, which seems to have a greater effect on obese participants with low math skills because they also show problems in the retrieval of solutions from working memory, resulting in a delay in the development of mathematical skills.
青春期前是巩固某些算术知识以及发展解决问题策略的重要时期。肥胖儿童在数学方面的学业表现似乎比体重正常的同龄人更差,这表明肥胖对关键发育阶段的数学技能有负面影响。为了验证这一假设,研究人员在一项延迟验证数学任务中收集了事件相关电位(ERP),该任务使用简单的加减法问题,受试对象为肥胖(体重指数BMI高于第95百分位数)和非肥胖(BMI在第5至第90百分位数之间)的不同数学技能水平的青春期前儿童;31名数学技能低的儿童(14名肥胖,平均BMI = 26.40,9.79岁;17名非肥胖,BMI = 17.45,9.76岁)和31名数学技能高的儿童(15名肥胖,BMI = 26.90,9.60岁;16名非肥胖,BMI = 17.13,9.63岁)。无论数学技能水平如何,体重组之间在任务准确性方面均未观察到显著差异。关于ERP,仅在减法条件下发现了电生理差异;肥胖参与者表现出一种与分配注意力资源能力下降相关的电生理模式,无论其数学技能水平如何,这些差异的特征是P300潜伏期比体重正常的同龄人更长。此外,数学技能高的肥胖参与者与体重正常的同龄人相比,左上顶叶表现出活动减退。此外,数学技能低的肥胖青春期前儿童比非肥胖参与者表现出更小的算术N400波幅,这反映了在检索数字的视觉、语义和词汇信息方面存在困难。我们得出结论,肥胖参与者在分配注意力方面比体重正常的同龄人能力更差,无论其行为表现如何,这似乎对数学技能低的肥胖参与者影响更大,因为他们在从工作记忆中检索解决方案方面也存在问题,导致数学技能发展延迟。