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The Use of a Computer Display Exaggerates the Connection Between Education and Approximate Number Ability in Remote Populations

Author(s)
Gibson, Edward A; Jara-Ettinger, Jose Julian; Levy, Roger P; Piantadosi, Steven Thomas
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Abstract
Piazza et al. reported a strong correlation between education and approximate number sense (ANS) acuity in a remote Amazonian population, suggesting that symbolic and nonsymbolic numerical thinking mutually enhance one another over in mathematics instruction. But Piazza et al. ran their task using a computer display, which may have exaggerated the connection between the two tasks, because participants with greater education (and hence better exact numerical abilities) may have been more comfortable with the task. To explore this possibility, we ran an ANS task in a remote population using two presentation methods: (a) a computer interface and (b) physical cards, within participants. If we only analyze the effect of education on ANS as measured by the computer version of the task, we replicate Piazza et al.’s finding. But importantly, the effect of education on the card version of the task is not significant, suggesting that the use of a computer display exaggerates effects. These results highlight the importance of task considerations when working with nonindustrialized cultures, especially those with low education. Furthermore, these results raise doubts about the proposal advanced by Piazza et al. that education enhances the acuity of the approximate number sense. Keywords: number comprehension; cross-culture differences; individual differences
Date issued
2017-12-17
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/122966
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences
Journal
Open Mind: Discoveries in Cognitive Science
Publisher
M.I.T. Press
Citation
Gibson, Edward et al. "The Use of a Computer Display Exaggerates the Connection Between Education and Approximate Number Ability in Remote Populations." Open Mind: Discoveries in Cognitive Science, 2, 1 (December 2017): 37–46 © 2017 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2470-2986

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