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Welcome! This blog is intended to provide assessment resources for Educational and other psychologists.

The material is CHC - oriented , but not entirely so.

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Friday, February 6, 2015

Dyscalculia: Characteristics, causes, and treatments



Price, Gavin R., and Daniel Ansari. "Dyscalculia: Characteristics, causes, and treatments." Numeracy 6.1 (2013): 2.

While preparing the third presentation in the series "mathematics and cognitive abilities" I came upon this paper.  It is written very clearly, and I highly recommend it.  Here are some interesting findings from this paper:
 Dyscalculia characteristics:

·         Poor retrieval of arithmetic facts from long term memory.  By third grade, typically developing children have developed a store of arithmetic facts in memory, from which they can quickly recall the solution to a given problem.  Children with dyscalculia, on the other hand, typically fail to develop such fluent fact-retrieval mechanisms, continuing to employ procedural strategies long after their typically developing peers have progressed to memory-based  strategies.  One of the immature procedural strategies children with dyscalculia use is "count all", in which the child displays two addends on his fingers or by drawing lines, and then counts the fingers or lines from 1.  As an indicator of the severity of the fact-retrieval deficit in children with dyscalculia, typically developing children have been found to recall an average of three times as many arithmetic facts as those with dyscalculia.
·         Poor number sense.  This difficulty is proven by research finding such as:
o   Israely scholars Avishai Henik and Orly Rubinsten  reported a lack of facilitation from numerical information in  children with dyscalculia during a numerical stroop task.  In this task, the child is presented with two digits differing in physical size (e.g. 3 5 or 3 5).  The child determines as fast as he can which digit is physically larger.  When there is congruence between digit physical size and numerical value  (like this:   3 5), reaction time in typically developing children is faster than when digit size and value are incongruent.  Children with dyscalculia don't show this effect.  It's not clear whether the reason for this is that the underlying semantic representation of quantity is impaired in children with dyscalculia, or whether they have a deficit in the link between the semantic representations and their symbolic referents (i.e., Arabic digits).
·         Children with dyscalculia have slower reaction time to determine which of two digits (having the same physical size) has a larger numerical value.
·         Children with dyscalculia also have a qualitatively different “distance effect”.  The distance effect refers to the behavioral phenomenon that, as the distance between two numbers being compared decreases (e.g., 2 – 9 versus 7 – 9), reaction times and errors increase. In other words, numbers that are closer together are harder to compare than numbers that are further apart. The numerical distance effect (NDE) is taken by many researchers to reflect the integrity of the underlying representation of numerical magnitude along a “mental number line” with a larger NDE indicating a less-precise or more noisy representation. In support of this idea, the NDE decreases in size over the course of development, suggesting an ontogenetic increase in the precision of the number sense. Children with DD have been shown to have larger NDEs than typically developing children, in much the same way that typically developing children show a larger NDE relative to adults, suggesting that DD children may have a less-refined, immature representation of numerical magnitude compared to their typically developing peers. Recent evidence suggests that the magnitude of the developmental delay in the precision of this representation may be on the order of five years, with DD children showing numerical-representation precision equivalent to typically developing children five years their junior.


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