2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2015.06.011
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Identifying the cognitive predictors of early counting and calculation skills: Evidence from a longitudinal study

Abstract: The extent that phonological, visual-spatial STM and non-symbolic quantitative skills support the development of counting and calculation skills was examined in this 14-month longitudinal study of 125 children. Initial assessments were made when the children were 4:8. Phonological awareness, visual-spatial STM and non-symbolic approximate discrimination predicted growth in early calculation skills. These results suggest that both the approximate number system and domain-general phonological and visual-spatial … Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
(135 reference statements)
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“…In the first study to show this relationship, Halberda and colleagues demonstrated that Weber fraction measured at 14 years of age retroactively predicted standardized math scores at age 5, even after controlling for verbal IQ (Halberda, Mazzocco, & Feigenson, 2008). This positive correlation has since been found in adults (Agrillo, Piffer, & Adriano, 2013; DeWind & Brannon, 2012; Halberda, Ly, Wilmer, Naiman, & Germine, 2012; Libertus, Odic, & Halberda, 2012; Lourenco, Bonny, Fernandez, & Rao, 2012); in school-aged children (Geary, Hoard, Nugent, & Rouder, 2015; Pinheiro-Chagas et al, 2014); in children just beginning formal math education (Gilmore et al, 2010; Keller & Libertus, 2015; Mundy & Gilmore, 2009); and in preschool aged children before they begin formal math education (Chu, vanMarle, & Geary, 2015; Libertus, Feigenson, & Halberda, 2011, 2013; Mazzocco, Feigenson, & Halberda, 2011b; Soto-Calvo, Simmons, Willis, & Adams, 2015; Starr, Libertus, & Brannon, 2013; van Marle, Chu, Li, & Geary, 2014). Three meta-analyses have concluded there is a significant correlation between ANS and math ability (Chen & Li, 2014; Fazio, Bailey, Thompson, & Siegler, 2014; Schneider et al, 2016).…”
Section: Is the Ans Foundational For Symbolic Mathematics?mentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…In the first study to show this relationship, Halberda and colleagues demonstrated that Weber fraction measured at 14 years of age retroactively predicted standardized math scores at age 5, even after controlling for verbal IQ (Halberda, Mazzocco, & Feigenson, 2008). This positive correlation has since been found in adults (Agrillo, Piffer, & Adriano, 2013; DeWind & Brannon, 2012; Halberda, Ly, Wilmer, Naiman, & Germine, 2012; Libertus, Odic, & Halberda, 2012; Lourenco, Bonny, Fernandez, & Rao, 2012); in school-aged children (Geary, Hoard, Nugent, & Rouder, 2015; Pinheiro-Chagas et al, 2014); in children just beginning formal math education (Gilmore et al, 2010; Keller & Libertus, 2015; Mundy & Gilmore, 2009); and in preschool aged children before they begin formal math education (Chu, vanMarle, & Geary, 2015; Libertus, Feigenson, & Halberda, 2011, 2013; Mazzocco, Feigenson, & Halberda, 2011b; Soto-Calvo, Simmons, Willis, & Adams, 2015; Starr, Libertus, & Brannon, 2013; van Marle, Chu, Li, & Geary, 2014). Three meta-analyses have concluded there is a significant correlation between ANS and math ability (Chen & Li, 2014; Fazio, Bailey, Thompson, & Siegler, 2014; Schneider et al, 2016).…”
Section: Is the Ans Foundational For Symbolic Mathematics?mentioning
confidence: 81%
“…(Starr, Libertus & Brannon, 2013). Recent longitudinal studies that follow children in the preschool years have revealed a nuanced relationship between the ANS and early symbolic math skills (Purpura & Logan, 2015; Soto-Calvo et al, 2015). Soto-Calvo and colleagues measured preschoolers’ ANS ability, a variety of symbolic math skills, phonological awareness, and visual-spatial short term memory at age 4 and then again 14 months later (Soto-Calvo et al, 2015).…”
Section: Is the Ans Foundational For Symbolic Mathematics?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Phonological awareness predicted individual differences in learning the number sequence; but not individual differences on tasks where the number sequence is mapped onto quantity (e.g., deciding which of two number words represented “more” or “less”; matching quantities to the corresponding Arabic numerals and vice versa). Along these lines, Soto-Calvo and colleagues (2015) found that phonological awareness assessed in the first year of pre-kindergarten (at 4 years, 8 months on average) no longer predicted sequential counting skills 14-months later after including the autoregressor (sequential counting skills from the previous year). If a cognitive predictor remains significant when autoregressor effects are controlled, it can be concluded that the cognitive predictor predicts growth in the outcome measure.…”
Section: Neurocognitive Skills and Their Relation To Math Achievementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Phonological awareness, more so than measures of vocabulary or word meaning, tap the quality of lexical representations (perhaps because they require fine distinctions between phonological representations such as cat vs. car or cat vs. rat) and is related to young children’s sequential counting skills (Barnes et al, 2011; Koponen, Salmi, Eklund, & Aro, 2013; Krajewski & Schneider, 2009; Soto-Calvo, Simmons, Willis, & Adams 2015). A longitudinal study conducted by Krajewski and Schnieder (2009) followed children from preschool to third grade and examined the relation of phonological awareness to the development of early numeracy skills.…”
Section: Neurocognitive Skills and Their Relation To Math Achievementmentioning
confidence: 99%
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