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Bidirectional estimation on the number line in kindergarteners: the effect of the familiarity with numbers
Fecha
2015Institución
Resumen
In recent years, mapping tasks have been used to explain development of symbolic and non-symbolic numerical
associations. The bidirectional mapping hypothesis (Castronovo & Seron, 2007) postulates that transcoding abilities
from non-symbolic to symbolic number representations and vice versa are developed in parallel. However, recent
research involving children has shown that non-symbolic to symbolic mapping is developed before symbolic to nonsymbolic
mapping, and that familiarity with numbers is an effective predictor of mapping skills. These findings are
based primarily on performance in estimation tasks, although number line tasks have also been used to assess
numerical development. The objective of the present research was to study the development of transcoding routes
using number line tasks, and to establish the effect of familiarity with numbers on this development. Familiarity was
determined based on performance in a counting task and the effect of the decade break on representational functions.
A sample of 442 5-year-old kindergarteners were given number line tasks (number-to-position and position-to-number)
and a counting task. Results showed that transcoding routes are well established in children familiar with numbers by
the time they complete kindergarten. These findings confirm the key role of familiarity with numbers and the decade
break in spatial representation of numbers and number acquisition.
Keywords numerical cognition; number line; bidirectional mapping hypothesis; number
transcoding; familiarity with numbers