Interactivity, Expertise and Individual Differences in Mental Arithmetic
Skip to main content
eScholarship
Open Access Publications from the University of California

Interactivity, Expertise and Individual Differences in Mental Arithmetic

Abstract

Participants completed long single digit sums in two interactivity contexts. In a low interactivity condition sums were solved with hands down. In a second, high interactivity condition participants used moveable tokens. As expected accuracy and efficiency was greater in the high compared to the low interactivity condition. In addition, participants were profiled in terms of working memory capacity, numeracy, math anxiety and expertise in math. All of these measures predicted calculation errors in the low interactivity conditions; however, in the high interactivity condition, participants’ performance was not determined by any of these variables. We also developed a scale to measure task engagement: Participants were significantly more engaged with the task when they completed the sums in the high interactivity condition. However engagement level did not correlate with calculation error, suggesting improvement in performance with tokens was not the result of greater task engagement. Interactivity transformed the deployment of arithmetic skills, ameliorated performance, and helped to reduce the difference in performance between individuals of low and high math expertise.

Main Content
For improved accessibility of PDF content, download the file to your device.
Current View