Relationships between magnitude representation, counting and memory in 4- to 7-year-old children: a developmental study. 2010

Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
Centre for Neuroscience in Education, Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge, UK. fs299@cam.ac.uk

BACKGROUND The development of an evolutionarily grounded analogue magnitude representation linked to the parietal lobes is frequently thought to be a major factor in the arithmetic development of humans. We investigated the relationship between counting and the development of magnitude representation in children, assessing also children's knowledge of number symbols, their arithmetic fact retrieval, their verbal skills, and their numerical and verbal short-term memory. METHODS The magnitude representation was tested by a non-symbolic magnitude comparison task. We have perfected previous experimental designs measuring magnitude discrimination skills in 65 children kindergarten (4-7-year-olds) by controlling for several variables which were not controlled for in previous similar research. We also used a large number of trials which allowed for running a full factorial ANOVA including all relevant factors. Tests of verbal counting, of short term memory, of number knowledge, of problem solving abilities and of verbal fluency were administered and correlated with performance in the magnitude comparison task. CONCLUSIONS Verbal counting knowledge and performance on simple arithmetic tests did not correlate with non-symbolic magnitude comparison at any age. Older children performed successfully on the number comparison task, showing behavioural patterns consistent with an analogue magnitude representation. In contrast, 4-year-olds were unable to discriminate number independently of task-irrelevant perceptual variables. Sensitivity to irrelevant perceptual features of the magnitude discrimination task was also affected by age, and correlated with memory, suggesting that more general cognitive abilities may play a role in performance in magnitude comparison tasks. CONCLUSIONS We conclude that young children are not able to discriminate numerical magnitudes when co-varying physical magnitudes are methodically pitted against number. We propose, along with others, that a rather domain general magnitude representation provides the later basis for a specialized representation of numerical magnitudes. For this representational specialization, the acquisition of the concept of abstract numbers, together with the development of other cognitive abilities, is indispensable.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D008433 Mathematics The deductive study of shape, quantity, and dependence. (From McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms, 6th ed) Mathematic
D008568 Memory Complex mental function having four distinct phases: (1) memorizing or learning, (2) retention, (3) recall, and (4) recognition. Clinically, it is usually subdivided into immediate, recent, and remote memory.
D010775 Photic Stimulation Investigative technique commonly used during ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY in which a series of bright light flashes or visual patterns are used to elicit brain activity. Stimulation, Photic,Visual Stimulation,Photic Stimulations,Stimulation, Visual,Stimulations, Photic,Stimulations, Visual,Visual Stimulations
D002648 Child A person 6 to 12 years of age. An individual 2 to 5 years old is CHILD, PRESCHOOL. Children
D002657 Child Development The continuous sequential physiological and psychological maturing of an individual from birth up to but not including ADOLESCENCE. Infant Development,Development, Child,Development, Infant
D002675 Child, Preschool A child between the ages of 2 and 5. Children, Preschool,Preschool Child,Preschool Children
D005260 Female Females
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000367 Age Factors Age as a constituent element or influence contributing to the production of a result. It may be applicable to the cause or the effect of a circumstance. It is used with human or animal concepts but should be differentiated from AGING, a physiological process, and TIME FACTORS which refers only to the passage of time. Age Reporting,Age Factor,Factor, Age,Factors, Age

Related Publications

Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
April 1987, Journal of experimental child psychology,
Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
May 2022, Developmental psychology,
Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
January 1981, Fiziologicheskii zhurnal,
Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
March 1958, Zeitschrift fur Kinderpsychiatrie. Revue de psychiatrie infantile,
Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
February 1986, Community dentistry and oral epidemiology,
Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
July 1999, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry,
Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
January 1986, Cahiers d'anesthesiologie,
Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
April 2011, Developmental psychobiology,
Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
September 2004, The British journal of educational psychology,
Fruzsina Soltész, and Dénes Szucs, and Lívia Szucs
May 2020, Child development,
Copied contents to your clipboard!