Opzioni
The role of working memory updating, inhibition, fluid intelligence, and reading comprehension in explaining differences between consistent and inconsistent arithmetic word-problem-solving performance
•
De Blas, Gonzalo Duque
•
Carretti, Barbara
Garcia-Madruga, Juan Antonio
2022
Periodico
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY
Abstract
Children’s performance in arithmetic word problems (AWPs) predicts
their academic success and their future employment and
earnings in adulthood. Understanding the nature and difficulties
of interpreting and solving AWPs is important for theoretical, educational,
and social reasons. We investigated the relation between
primary school children’s performance in different types of AWPs
and their basic cognitive abilities (reading comprehension, fluid
intelligence, inhibition, and updating processes). The study
involved 182 fourth- and fifth-graders. Participants were administered
an AWP-solving task and other tasks assessing fluid intelligence,
reading comprehension, inhibition, and updating. The
AWP-solving task included comparison problems incorporating
either the adverb more than or the adverb less than, which demand
consistent or inconsistent operations of addition or subtraction.
The results showed that consistent problems were easier than
inconsistent problems. Efficiency in solving inconsistent problems
is related to inhibition and updating. Moreover, our results seem to
indicate that the consistency effect is related to updating processes’
efficiency. Path analyses showed that reading comprehension
was the most important predictor of AWP-solving accuracy.
Diritti
open access
license:copyright editore
license:creative commons
license uri:iris.pri02
license uri:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/