Spatial biases in approximate arithmetic are subject to sequential dependency effects and dissociate from attentional biases

Q2 Mathematics Journal of Numerical Cognition Pub Date : 2023-03-31 DOI:10.5964/jnc.8373
M. Glaser, A. Knops
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Abstract

The notion that mental arithmetic is associated with shifts of spatial attention along a spatially organised mental number representation has received empirical support from three lines of research. First, participants tend to overestimate results of addition and underestimate those of subtraction problems in both exact and approximate formats. This has been termed the operational momentum (OM) effect. Second, participants are faster in detecting right-sided targets presented in the course of addition problems and left-sided targets in subtraction problems (attentional bias). Third, participants are biased toward choosing right-sided response alternatives to indicate the results of addition problems and left-sided response alternatives for subtraction problems (Spatial Association Of Responses [SOAR] effect). These effects potentially have their origin in operation-specific shifts of attention along a spatially organised mental number representation: rightward for addition and leftward for subtraction. Using a lateralised target detection task during the calculation phase of non-symbolic additions and subtractions, the current study measured the attentional focus, the OM and SOAR effects. In two experiments, we replicated the OM and SOAR effects but did not observe operation-specific biases in the lateralised target-detection task. We describe two new characteristics of the OM effect: First, a time-resolved, block-wise analysis of both experiments revealed sequential dependency effects in that the OM effect builds up over the course of the experiment, driven by the increasing underestimation of subtraction over time. Second, the OM effect was enhanced after arithmetic operation repetition compared to trials where arithmetic operation switched from one trial to the next. These results call into question the operation-specific attentional biases as the sole generator of the observed effects and point to the involvement of additional, potentially decisional processes that operate across trials.
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近似算术中的空间偏差会受到顺序依赖效应的影响,并与注意力偏差无关
心算与空间注意力沿着空间组织的心理数字表示的转移有关,这一观点得到了三个研究领域的实证支持。首先,无论是精确形式还是近似形式,参与者都倾向于高估加法的结果,而低估减法的结果。这被称为作战动量效应。其次,参与者在加法问题中检测右侧目标的速度更快,在减法问题中检测左侧目标的速度更快(注意偏差)。第三,参与者倾向于选择右侧响应选项来表示加法问题的结果,而选择左侧响应选项来指示减法问题的结果(响应的空间关联[SOAR]效应)。这些效应可能起源于特定于操作的注意力沿着空间组织的心理数字表示的转移:向右表示加法,向左表示减法。在非符号加法和减法的计算阶段,使用偏侧目标检测任务,当前的研究测量了注意力焦点、OM和SOAR效应。在两个实验中,我们复制了OM和SOAR效应,但在偏侧目标检测任务中没有观察到特定操作的偏差。我们描述了OM效应的两个新特征:首先,对两个实验的时间分辨、分块分析揭示了顺序依赖效应,因为随着时间的推移,对减法的低估越来越大,OM效应在实验过程中不断累积。其次,与算术运算从一个试验切换到下一个试验的试验相比,重复算术运算后OM效应增强。这些结果对作为观察到的效果的唯一产生者的特定于操作的注意力偏差提出了质疑,并指出了在整个试验中操作的额外的、潜在的决策过程的参与。
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来源期刊
Journal of Numerical Cognition
Journal of Numerical Cognition Mathematics-Numerical Analysis
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
审稿时长
40 weeks
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