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Aging and the number sense: preserved basic non-symbolic numerical processing and enhanced basic symbolic processing

机译:老化和数字意义:保留基本的非符号数字处理和增强的基本符号处理

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摘要

Aging often leads to general cognitive decline in domains such as memory and attention. The effect of aging on numerical cognition, particularly on foundational numerical skills known as the number sense, is not well-known. Early research focused on the effect of aging on arithmetic. Recent studies have begun to investigate the impact of healthy aging on basic numerical skills, but focused on non-symbolic quantity discrimination alone. Moreover, contradictory findings have emerged. The current study aimed to further investigate the impact of aging on basic non-symbolic and symbolic numerical skills. A group of 25 younger (18–25) and 25 older adults (60–77) participated in non-symbolic and symbolic numerical comparison tasks. Mathematical and spelling abilities were also measured. Results showed that aging had no effect on foundational non-symbolic numerical skills, as both groups performed similarly [RTs, accuracy and Weber fractions (w)]. All participants showed decreased non-symbolic acuity (accuracy and w) in trials requiring inhibition. However, aging appears to be associated with a greater decline in discrimination speed in such trials. Furthermore, aging seems to have a positive impact on mathematical ability and basic symbolic numerical processing, as older participants attained significantly higher mathematical achievement scores, and performed significantly better on the symbolic comparison task than younger participants. The findings suggest that aging and its lifetime exposure to numbers may lead to better mathematical achievement and stronger basic symbolic numerical skills. Our results further support the observation that basic non-symbolic numerical skills are resilient to aging, but that aging may exacerbate poorer performance on trials requiring inhibitory processes. These findings lend further support to the notion that preserved basic numerical skills in aging may reflect the preservation of an innate, primitive, and embedded number sense.
机译:衰老通常会导致诸如记忆力和注意力等领域的普遍认知下降。衰老对数字认知的影响,特别是对称为数字感的基础数字技能的影响,尚不为人所知。早期的研究集中在老化对算术的影响上。最近的研究已开始研究健康的衰老对基本数字技能的影响,但仅关注非符号量的歧视。而且,出现了矛盾的发现。当前的研究旨在进一步研究衰老对基本的非符号和符号数字技能的影响。一组25位年轻的(18-25)和25位年龄较大的成年人(60-77)参加了非符号和符号数值比较任务。还测量了数学和拼写能力。结果表明,衰老对基础的非符号数字技能没有影响,因为两组的表现相似[RT,准确性和韦伯分数(w)]。在需要抑制的试验中,所有参与者均显示出非符号敏锐度(准确性和w)降低。但是,在此类试验中,衰老似乎与歧视速度的更大下降有关。此外,衰老似乎对数学能力和基本的符号数值处理有积极影响,因为年长的参与者获得了明显更高的数学成就分数,并且在符号比较任务上的表现明显优于年轻的参与者。研究结果表明,衰老及其一生接触数字可能会带来更好的数学成就和更强的基本符号数字技能。我们的结果进一步支持了以下观察结果:基本的非符号数字技能可以抵抗衰老,但是在需要抑制过程的试验中,衰老可能会加剧较差的表现。这些发现进一步支持了这样的观念,即在衰老过程中保留基本的数字技能可能反映出对固有的,原始的和嵌入的数字意义的保留。

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