4.7 Article

Numerical Magnitude Processing in Deaf Adolescents and Its Contribution to Arithmetical Ability

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.584183

Keywords

numerical magnitude representation; arithmetic computation; congenital deafness; acquired deafness; mathematical cognition

Funding

  1. Humanities and Social Science Fund of Ministry of Education of China [19YJA880002]
  2. Philosophy and Social Science Foundation of Hainan Province in China [HNSK(YB)1936]

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This study examined the contribution of numerical magnitude processing to arithmetic ability in deaf adolescents, finding that congenital deaf individuals outperformed acquired deaf individuals in numerical magnitude processing and arithmetic computation. There was a close association between numerical magnitude processing and arithmetic computation in all deaf adolescents, and numerical magnitude processing was found to predict arithmetic computation in deaf adolescents.
Although most deaf individuals could use sign language or sign/spoken language mix, hearing loss would still affect their language acquisition. Compensatory plasticity holds that the lack of auditory stimulation experienced by deaf individuals, such as congenital deafness, can be met by enhancements in visual cognition. And the studies of hearing individuals have showed that visual form perception is the cognitive mechanism that could explain the association between numerical magnitude processing and arithmetic computation. Therefore, we examined numerical magnitude processing and its contribution to arithmetical ability in deaf adolescents, and explored the differences between the congenital and acquired deafness. 112 deaf adolescents (58 congenital deafness) and 58 hearing adolescents performed a series of cognitive and mathematical tests, and it was found there was no significant differences between the congenital group and the hearing group, but congenital group outperformed acquired group in numerical magnitude processing (reaction time) and arithmetic computation. It was also found there was a close association between numerical magnitude processing and arithmetic computation in all deaf adolescents, and after controlling for the demographic variables (age, gender, onset of hearing loss) and general cognitive abilities (non-verbal IQ, processing speed, reading comprehension), numerical magnitude processing could predict arithmetic computation in all deaf adolescents but not in congenital group. The role of numerical magnitude processing (symbolic and non-symbolic) in deaf adolescents' mathematical performance should be paid attention in the training of arithmetical ability.

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