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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.

The blog features selected papers, presentations made by me and other materials.

If you're new here, I suggest reading the presentation series in the right hand column – "intelligence and cognitive abilities".

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Friday, March 6, 2015

Visual processing and mathematics


I continue to search for information about the relationship between cognitive abilities and math performance.  The more we know about it, the better we'll be able to link specific math difficulties to cognitive abilities that may be causing these specific difficulties.
Here are some of the things we know thus far about the relation between visual processing and math:

·         Visual processing is significantly and consistently linked with math in "older" children ("older" children probably refers to junior high school and high school students) (Flanagan et al, 2006).
·         Precision in placing numbers on a number line predicts future math achievement.  Some see . this ability as a measure of the number sense (Geary et al, 2012).
  • Poor visuospatial skill is related with dyscalculia (Furlong et al, 2014)

  • Visual processing as measured by the WJ3COG is not predictive of math achievement as measured by WJ3ACH . (McGrew& Wendling,  2010) .
Here is another study examining this relationship.

Tibber, M. S., Manasseh, G. S., Clarke, R. C., Gagin, G., Swanbeck, S. N., Butterworth, B. & Dakin, S. C. (2013). Sensitivity to numerosity is not a unique visuospatial psychophysical predictor of mathematical ability. Vision research, 89, 1-9.

More than 300 participants aged 6-71 were recruited to an experiment in the London science museum.  They completed a questionnaire about their age, sex, general and math education level, took a math test and performed a series of visuospatial matching tasks.

Mathematical ability was assessed using a computer-based multiple-choice test adapted from the Mathematics Calculation Subtest (WJ-Rcalc) of the Woodcock–Johnson III Tests of Cognitive Abilities.  Participants were presented with a series of problems that increased in difficulty from simple addition and subtraction through to multiplication and division of fractions and negative integers . Participants were given 30 s to respond to each problem.   The test was  terminated if the participant made a certain number of errors.  

Visuospatial processing was assessed by a visual matching test.  Two patches of oriented Gabor elements were presented to the left and right of screen centre (see figure below). Participants used a mouse to adjust the patch on the right (the test) so that it matched the appearance of the patch on the left (the reference) for a given parameter (orientation, size, numerosity or density).  As far as I know, this task does not fit any of the narrow CHC visual processing abilities.



The results showed, that older participants performed significantly better on all tasks ( visuospatial and math tasks).  This finding is surprising because I would expect a decline in performance above the age of 20-30.

It was also found that men significantly outperformed women on all tasks.

No correlation was found between the ability to match density and size and math achievement.

In participants older than 18, there was a significant correlation between the ability to match orientation and quantity and math achievement.  Such a tendency was also found in children but it was not significant.  The authors think that's because the children's sample size  was too small.

The correlation found between the ability to match quantities and math achievement is not surprising at all.  The ability to match quantities is essentially a math task (reflecting number sense) that is only performed visually.  The correlation found in this study and other studies between the ability to match quantities and math achievement is similar:  between 0.2 and 0.4.   Sensitivity to numerosity is a significant and reliable predictor of math scores.

How can we explain the correlation between the ability to match orientation and math achievement?  The authors ask this question but don’t answer it in a convincing way.  They say that there probably is a common system at the base of math and visuospatial tasks, and that people whose system is more sensitive (better) will tend to study high level math.




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