Mapping skills between symbols and quantities in preschoolers: The role of finger patterns

IF 3.1 1区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Developmental Science Pub Date : 2024-05-15 DOI:10.1111/desc.13529
Josetxu Orrantia, David Muñez, Rosario Sánchez, Laura Matilla
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Abstract

Mapping skills between different codes to represent numerical information, such as number symbols (i.e., verbal number words and written digits) and non-symbolic quantities, are important in the development of the concept of number. The aim of the current study is to investigate children's mapping skills by incorporating another numerical code that emerges at early stages in development, finger patterns. Specifically, the study investigates (i) the order in which mapping skills develop and the association with young children's understanding of cardinality; and (ii) whether finger patterns are processed similarly to symbolic codes or rather as non-symbolic quantities. Preschool children (3-year-olds, N = 113, Mage = 40.8 months, SDage = 3.6 months; 4-year-olds, N = 103, Mage = 52.9 months, SDage = 3.4 months) both cardinality knowers and subset-knowers, were presented with twelve tasks that assessed the mappings between number words, Arabic digits, finger patterns, and quantities. The results showed that children's ability to map symbolic numbers precedes the understanding that such symbols reflect quantities, and that children recognize finger patterns above their cardinality knowledge, suggesting that finger patterns are symbolic in essence.

Research Highlights

  • Children are more accurate in mapping between finger patterns and symbols (number words and Arabic digits) than in mapping finger patterns and quantities, indicating that fingers are processed holistically as symbolic codes.
  • Children can map finger patterns to symbols above their corresponding cardinality level even in subset-knowers.
  • Finger patterns may play a role in the process by which children learn to map symbols to quantities.
  • Fingers patterns’ use in the classroom context may be an adequate instructional and diagnostic tool.

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学龄前儿童符号与数量之间的映射技能:手指图案的作用
数字符号(即口头数词和书面数字)和非符号数量等不同数字信息表示代码之间的映射技能,对数字概念的发展非常重要。本研究旨在结合儿童早期发展阶段出现的另一种数字编码--手指图案,对儿童的映射技能进行研究。具体来说,本研究将探讨:(i) 绘图技能的发展顺序以及与幼儿对万有引力的理解之间的关联;(ii) 手指图案是作为符号代码进行处理,还是作为非符号量进行处理。学龄前儿童(3 岁,人数=113,年龄=40.8 个月,中位年龄=3.6 个月;4 岁,人数=103,年龄=52.9 个月,中位年龄=3.4 个月)既有明细认知者,也有子集认知者,他们接受了 12 项任务,评估数词、阿拉伯数字、手指图案和数量之间的映射关系。结果表明,儿童对符号数字的映射能力先于对这些符号反映数量的理解能力,而且儿童对手指图案的识别能力先于对万以内数的识别能力,这表明手指图案的本质是符号。研究亮点儿童在手指图案与符号(数词和阿拉伯数字)之间的映射比手指图案与数量之间的映射更准确,这表明手指是作为符号代码进行整体处理的。即使是在子集认知者中,儿童也能将手指图案映射到高于其相应卡位等级的符号上。在儿童学习将符号映射到数量的过程中,手指图案可能起到了一定的作用。在课堂上使用手指图形可能是一种适当的教学和诊断工具。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
8.10%
发文量
132
期刊介绍: Developmental Science publishes cutting-edge theory and up-to-the-minute research on scientific developmental psychology from leading thinkers in the field. It is currently the only journal that specifically focuses on human developmental cognitive neuroscience. Coverage includes: - Clinical, computational and comparative approaches to development - Key advances in cognitive and social development - Developmental cognitive neuroscience - Functional neuroimaging of the developing brain
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