How do people compare visualizations of fraction magnitudes? Evidence from adults’ and children’s eye movements with continuous and discretized tape diagrams

IF 1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Sabrina Schwarzmeier , Andreas Obersteiner , Martha Wagner Alibali , Vijay Marupudi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Adults and children are able to compare visually represented fractions. Past studies show that people are more efficient with continuous visualizations than with discretized ones, but the specific reasons are unclear. Presumably, continuous visualizations highlight magnitudes more directly, while discretized ones encourage less efficient strategies such as counting. In two experiments, adults and children compared the magnitudes of continuous and discretized tape diagrams of fractions. In both experiments, participants answered more accurately, faster, and with fewer eye saccades when the visualizations were continuous rather than discretized. Sequences of saccades indicated that participants used counting strategies less often with continuous than discretized diagrams. The results suggest that adults and children are more efficient with continuous than discretized visualizations because they use more efficient, magnitude-based strategies with continuous visualizations. The findings indicate that integrating continuous visualizations in classroom teaching more frequently could be beneficial for supporting students in developing fraction magnitude concepts.

人们如何比较分数大小的可视化?连续和离散磁带图中成人和儿童眼球运动的证据
成人和儿童都能够比较直观表示的分数。过去的研究表明,人们使用连续直观图比使用离散直观图更有效率,但具体原因尚不清楚。据推测,连续可视化更直接地突出了大小,而离散化的可视化则鼓励效率较低的策略,如计数。在两个实验中,成人和儿童比较了连续和离散的分数磁带图的大小。在这两项实验中,当视觉效果是连续的而不是离散的时,参与者的回答更准确、更快速,眼球的回扫次数也更少。眼球回扫序列表明,连续图比离散图更少使用计数策略。研究结果表明,成人和儿童在使用连续可视化图示时比使用离散可视化图示时更有效率,因为他们在使用连续可视化图示时使用了更有效率的、基于幅度的策略。研究结果表明,在课堂教学中更频繁地使用连续直观图有利于帮助学生发展分数大小概念。
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来源期刊
Journal of Mathematical Behavior
Journal of Mathematical Behavior EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
17.60%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: The Journal of Mathematical Behavior solicits original research on the learning and teaching of mathematics. We are interested especially in basic research, research that aims to clarify, in detail and depth, how mathematical ideas develop in learners. Over three decades, our experience confirms a founding premise of this journal: that mathematical thinking, hence mathematics learning as a social enterprise, is special. It is special because mathematics is special, both logically and psychologically. Logically, through the way that mathematical ideas and methods have been built, refined and organized for centuries across a range of cultures; and psychologically, through the variety of ways people today, in many walks of life, make sense of mathematics, develop it, make it their own.
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