Litcius/Paper detail

Anxiety-Related Difficulties With Complex Arithmetic

Julia F. Huber, Christina Artemenko

2021Zeitschrift für Psychologie13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract. Human behavior depends on the interplay between cognition and emotion. Negative emotions like anxiety affect performance, particularly in complex tasks, by limiting cognitive resources – known as the anxiety–complexity effect. This study set out to replicate the anxiety–complexity effect in a web-based experiment. We investigated individual differences in math anxiety – a negative emotional response specific to math – and arithmetic performance ( N = 382). The mental arithmetic task consisted of a two-digit addition and subtraction, with/without carrying or borrowing, respectively. As expected and preregistered, higher math anxiety was related to poorer arithmetic performance, especially in complex tasks – indicating the anxiety–complexity effect. Consequently, the negative math anxiety-performance link is especially pronounced for complex arithmetic, which requires calculations across place-values and thus working memory resources. This successful replication of the anxiety–complexity effect suggests that math-anxious individuals have particular difficulties in complex arithmetic.

Topics & Concepts

AnxietySubtractionMathematical anxietyCognitionPsychologyArithmeticMental arithmeticCognitive psychologyTask (project management)Set (abstract data type)Affect (linguistics)Developmental psychologyComputer scienceMathematicsCommunicationEconomicsMedicineNeuroscienceBlood pressureRadiologyProgramming languageHeart ratePsychiatryManagementCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsEducation, Achievement, and GiftednessCreativity in Education and Neuroscience