6533b855fe1ef96bd12b064e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Selecting between Competitors in Multiplication Tasks: An Explanation of the Errors Produced by Adolescents with Learning Difficulties

Pierre BarrouilletEric LathulièreMichel Fayol

subject

Social Psychology05 social sciences050301 educationCognitionCorrect response050105 experimental psychologyMemory problemsEducationDevelopmental psychologyTask (project management)Developmental NeuroscienceNull (SQL)Learning disabilityDevelopmental and Educational Psychologymedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesMultiplicationmedicine.symptomLife-span and Life-course StudiesSet (psychology)Psychology0503 educationSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)

description

Two experiments were conducted in order to determine the nature of the difficulties encountered by learning disabled (LD) adolescents in the resolution of multiplication problems ( a b, where a and b vary between 2 and 9). A response production task (Experiment 1) revealed that the incorrect responses generally belonged to the table of one of the two operands, and that the order of difficulty of the problems was the same for the LDs as for normal children, adolescents, and educated adults as reported in the literature. This result suggests that the difficulties are not solely due to memory problems. Experiment 2 tested the hypothesis that these difficulties were caused by a problem in inhibiting the incorrect responses from a set of possible responses. Subjects completed a multiple response task in which the correct response was presented along with three distractors. The level of interference between the correct response and the distractors was varied by manipulating the nature of the distractors (Null Interference, NI: numbers that did not belong to the multiplication table; Weak Interference, WI: numbers belonging to other tables than those of a and b; Strong Interference, SI: numbers belonging to the tables of either a or b). The SI condition resulted in a higher level of errors than the NI and WI conditions and there was no difference between these latter two conditions. This result suggests that the main difficulty encountered by LD subjects is associated with inefficient inhibition of incorrect responses. Thus, the mobilisation of inhibitory processes seems to be an important stage in the development of multiplication skills.

https://doi.org/10.1080/016502597384857