Logie R H, Gilhooly K J, Wynn V
Department of Psychology, University of Aberdeen, Kings College, Scotland.
Mem Cognit. 1994 Jul;22(4):395-410. doi: 10.3758/bf03200866.
Mental calculation is an important everyday skill involving access to well-learned procedures, problem solving, and working memory. Although there is an active literature on acquiring concepts and procedures for mental arithmetic, relatively little is known about the role of working memory in this task. This paper reports two experiments in which dual-task methodology is used to study the role of components of working memory in mental addition. In Experiment 1, mental addition of auditorily presented two-digit numbers was significantly disrupted by concurrent random letter generation and, to a lesser extent, by concurrent articulatory suppression, but was unimpaired by concurrent hand movement or by presentation of irrelevant pictures. Although the number of errors increased with two of the dual tasks, the incorrect responses tended to be quite close to the correct answer. In Experiment 2, the numbers for addition were presented visually. Here again, random generation produced the largest disruption of mental arithmetic performance, while a smaller amount of disruption was observed for articulatory suppression, hand movement, and unattended auditorily presented two-digit numbers. The overall levels of performance were better and the absolute size of the disruptive effects shown with visual presentation was very small compared with those found for auditory presentation. This pattern of results is consistent with a role for a central executive component of working memory in performing the calculations required for mental addition and in producing approximately correct answers. Visuospatial resources in working memory may also be involved in approximations. The data support the view that the subvocal rehearsal component of working memory provides a means of maintaining accuracy in mental arithmetic, and this matches a similar conclusion derived from previous work on counting. The general implications for the role of working memory in arithmetic problem solving will be discussed.
心算能力是一项重要的日常技能,涉及运用熟练掌握的计算方法、解决问题的能力以及工作记忆。尽管关于心算概念和方法的习得已有大量研究,但对于工作记忆在这项任务中的作用,我们所知甚少。本文报告了两项实验,运用双任务方法研究工作记忆各成分在心算加法中的作用。在实验1中,同时进行随机字母生成显著干扰了对听觉呈现的两位数进行心算加法,同时进行发音抑制也有一定程度的干扰,但同时进行手部运动或呈现无关图片则未产生干扰。尽管两项双任务导致错误数量增加,但错误答案往往与正确答案较为接近。在实验2中,加法运算的数字以视觉形式呈现。同样,随机生成对心算表现的干扰最大,而发音抑制、手部运动以及未注意的听觉呈现两位数产生的干扰较小。与听觉呈现相比,视觉呈现的整体表现水平更高,干扰效应的绝对大小也非常小。这一结果模式与工作记忆的中央执行成分在心算所需计算以及得出近似正确答案中所起的作用相一致。工作记忆中的视觉空间资源可能也参与了近似计算。数据支持这样的观点,即工作记忆的语音复述成分提供了一种在心算中保持准确性的方式,这与先前关于计数的研究得出的类似结论相符。我们将讨论工作记忆在解决算术问题中的作用的一般意义。