Publication | Closed Access
Early development of spatial‐numeric associations: evidence from spatial and quantitative performance of preschoolers
151
Citations
52
References
2009
Year
Early DevelopmentEducationPreschool DevelopmentCognitionEarly Childhood EducationSpatial PerformancePsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyCognitive DevelopmentNumerical CompetenceQuantitative PerformanceNumeric MagnitudesSpatial‐numeric AssociationsSpatial ReasoningBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceSpatial Statistical AnalysisEarly Childhood DevelopmentNumeracyExperimental PsychologyChild DevelopmentEarly EducationQuantitative Spatial ModelDirectional BiasPediatricsDevelopmental ScienceSpatial CognitionSpatial Statistics
Numeric magnitudes often bias adults' spatial performance. Partly because the direction of this bias (left-to-right versus right-to-left) is culture-specific, it has been assumed that the orientation of spatial-numeric associations is a late development, tied to reading practice or schooling. Challenging this assumption, we found that preschoolers expected numbers to be ordered from left-to-right when they searched for objects in numbered containers, when they counted, and (to a lesser extent) when they added and subtracted. Further, preschoolers who lacked these biases demonstrated more immature, logarithmic representations of numeric value than preschoolers who exhibited the directional bias, suggesting that spatial-numeric associations aid magnitude representations for symbols denoting increasingly large numbers.
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