Abstract

Understanding whether a sequence is presented in an order or not (i.e., ordinality) is a robust predictor of adults’ arithmetic performance, but the mechanisms underlying this skill and its relationship with mathematics remain unclear. In this study, we examined (a) the cognitive strategies involved in ordinality inferred from behavioural effects observed in different types of sequences and (b) whether ordinality is also related to mathematical reasoning besides arithmetic. In Experiment 1, participants performed an arithmetic, a mathematical reasoning test, and an order task, which had balanced trials on the basis of order, direction, regularity, and distance. We observed standard distance effects (DEs) for ordered and non-ordered sequences, which suggest reliance on magnitude comparison strategies. This contradicts past studies that reported reversed distance effects (RDEs) for some types of sequences, which suggest reliance on retrieval strategies. Also, we found that ordinality predicted arithmetic but not mathematical reasoning when controlling for fluid intelligence. In Experiment 2, we investigated whether the aforementioned absence of RDEs was because of our trial list composition. Participants performed two order tasks: in both tasks, no RDE was found demonstrating the fragility of the RDE. In addition, results showed that the strategies used when processing ordinality were modulated by the trial list composition and presentation order of the tasks. Altogether, these findings reveal that ordinality is strongly related to arithmetic and that the strategies used when processing ordinality are highly dependent on the context in which the task is presented.

Highlights

  • Elementary arithmetic comprises four basic operations, namely, addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division

  • We analysed whether ordinality predicted arithmetic performance and mathematical reasoning

  • We found a relation between ordinality and individual differences in arithmetic performance which is in line with previous findings (Goffin & Ansari, 2016; Lyons & Beilock, 2009, 2013; Lyons et al, 2014; Morsanyi et al, 2017; Sasanguie et al, 2017; Vogel et al, 2017; Vos et al, 2017)

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Summary

Introduction

Elementary arithmetic comprises four basic operations, namely, addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. These operations make it possible to handle various situations in daily life in which numbers play a role. Arithmetic is a building block for more complex mathematical skills. The domain of numerical cognition has intensively studied the predictors of arithmetic and mathematical skills. One predictor that has received increased attention in the past years is ordinality (for overviews, see Lyons et al, 2016; Sury & Rubinsten, 2012). Ordinality refers to the relation between items in a sequence and is often measured with an order task where different types of Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 74(11)

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