Abstract

We investigated whether training the Approximate Number System (ANS) would transfer to improved arithmetic performance in 7-8 year olds compared to a control group. All children participated in Pre- and Post-Training assessments of exact symbolic arithmetic (additions and subtractions) and approximate symbolic arithmetic abilities (a novel test). During 3 weeks of training (approximately 25 minutes per day, two days per week), we found that children in the ANS Training group had stable individual differences in ANS efficiency and increased in ANS efficiency, both within and across the training days. We also found that individual differences in ANS efficiency were related to symbolic arithmetic performance. Regarding arithmetic performance, both the ANS training group and the control group improved in all tests (exact and approximate arithmetics tests). Thus, the ANS training did not show a specific effect on arithmetic performance. However, considering the initial arithmetic level of children, we found that the trained children showed a higher improvement on the novel approximate arithmetic test compared to the control group, but only for those children with a low pre-training arithmetic score. Nevertheless, this difference within the low pre-training arithmetic score level was not observed in the exact arithmetic test. The limited benefits observed in these results suggest that this type of ANS discrimination training, through quantity comparison tasks, may not have an impact on symbolic arithmetics overall, although we cautiously propose that it could help with approximate arithmetic abilities for children at this age with below-average arithmetic performance.

Highlights

  • We investigated whether training the Approximate Number System (ANS) would transfer to improved arithmetic performance in 7-8 year olds compared to a control group

  • We evaluate whether individual differences in ANS efficiency are related to symbolic arithmetic performance; whether training the ANS for an extended period can improve children’s ANS efficiency; whether such improvement will transfer to any arithmetic skills; and whether the initial arithmetic level of children before the training helps to determine the efficacy of such an intervention

  • We looked for the main signature, ratio-dependent performance that results in a specific curve of percent correct as a function of ratio (Feigenson et al, 2004; Halberda et al, 2008; Libertus & Brannon, 2009; Starr, Libertus, & Brannon, 2013a), in which participants' accuracy at determining the bigger of two approximate numerosities decreases as the ratio between the numbers decreases

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Summary

Introduction

We investigated whether training the Approximate Number System (ANS) would transfer to improved arithmetic performance in 7-8 year olds compared to a control group. The limited benefits observed in these results suggest that this type of ANS discrimination training, through quantity comparison tasks, may not have an impact on symbolic arithmetics overall, we cautiously propose that it could help with approximate arithmetic abilities for children at this age with below-average arithmetic performance. This relationship holds even when general intelligence, verbal ability, and many other cognitive factors are controlled for (Halberda et al, 2008; Libertus, Feigenson, & Halberda, 2013)

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