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Boys’ advantage on the fractions number line is mediated by visuospatial attention: Evidence for a parietal‐spatial contribution to number line learning

David C. Geary, John E. Scofield, Mary K. Hoard, Lara Nugent

2020Developmental Science23 citationsDOI

Abstract

The study tested the hypotheses that boys will have an advantage learning the fractions number line and this advantage will be mediated by spatial abilities. Fractions number line and, as a contrast, fractions arithmetic performance were assessed for 342 adolescents, as was their intelligence, working memory, and various spatial abilities. Boys showed smaller placement errors on the fractions number line (d = -0.22) and correctly solved more fractions arithmetic problems (d = 0.23) than girls. Working memory and intelligence predicted performance on both fractions measures, and a measure of visuospatial attention uniquely predicted number line performance and fully mediated the sex difference. Visuospatial working memory uniquely predicted fractions arithmetic performance and fully mediated the sex difference. The results help to clarify the nuanced relations between spatial abilities and formal mathematics learning and the sex differences that often emerge in mathematical domains that have a visuospatial component.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyCognitive psychologyNumber lineLine (geometry)Spatial learningSpatial abilityNeuroscienceDevelopmental psychologyCognitionMathematics educationMathematicsGeometryCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsMathematics Education and Teaching TechniquesReading and Literacy Development
Boys’ advantage on the fractions number line is mediated by visuospatial attention: Evidence for a parietal‐spatial contribution to number line learning | Litcius