阅读和书写单词和数字:相似点、不同点和含义

R. Moura, V. G. Haase, J. B. Lopes-Silva, L. T. Batista, Fernanda Rocha de Freitas, J. Bahnmueller, K. Moeller
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引用次数: 3

摘要

识字和计算能力是文化习得的能力,对教育和职业前景至关重要(Parsons & Bynner, 1997;Ritchie & Bates出版社,2013;Romano et al., 2010)。在调查儿童的这些能力时,来自教育和认知科学的研究人员经常关注单词或数字的书写和阅读。因此,这些通常代表两个独立的研究方向。然而,近年来,人们对学习读写单词和学习数字之间的相关共性的研究兴趣越来越大(例如,Lopes-Silva等人,2016)。有人认为,单词和数字的有效处理需要部分重叠的认知架构,包括基本的感知能力、注意力、工作记忆(WM)、语言、视觉空间和视觉结构处理以及文字运动排序等(例如,Collins & Laski, 2019;吉尔里,2005)。在过去的几十年里,研究人员主要关注语音处理作为读写单词的认知前兆(Castles & colheart, 2004),或者数字大小理解作为数字处理的最重要前兆(Siegler & Braithwaite, 2017)。在本章中,我们的目标是通过讨论语音和幅度处理在理解单词和数字中的作用,以及这些过程之间更详细的相互作用,将这两方面的研究结合起来。特别是,我们将讨论幼儿符号(口头和阿拉伯语)代码的结构和习得方面。此外,我们将讨论两种代码的相似性和特殊性,以及它们如何在人类发展的早期阶段获得语义。此外,我们将根据文字和数字符号编码发展之间的相互作用,阐述数学和阅读困难之间的共病性。最后,我们将整合这些论点
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reading and writing words and numbers: Similarities, differences, and implications
Literacy and numeracy are culturally acquired abilities that are well established as crucial for educational and vocational prospects (Parsons & Bynner, 1997; Ritchie & Bates, 2013; Romano et al., 2010). When investigating these abilities in children, researchers from educational and cognitive sciences often focus on the writing and reading of either words or numbers. Accordingly, these usually represent two independent lines of research. Nevertheless, in recent years there is increasing research interest into relevant commonalities between learning to read and write words as well as numbers (e.g., Lopes-Silva et al., 2016). It has been argued that efficient processing of words and numbers requires a partially overlapping cognitive architecture including basic perceptual abilities, attention, working memory (WM), verbal, visuo-spatial and visuo-constructional processing as well as graphomotor sequencing, among others (e.g., Collins & Laski, 2019; Geary, 2005). Over the last decades, researchers have mostly been focusing on either phonological processing as a cognitive precursor of reading and writing words (Castles & Coltheart, 2004) or on numerical magnitude understanding as the most important precursor of number processing (Siegler & Braithwaite, 2017). In this chapter, we aim at bringing together both lines of research by discussing the role of phonological and magnitude processing for the understanding of words and numbers, as well as interactions between these processes in more detail. In particular, we will address aspects of the structure and the acquisition of symbolic (both verbal and Arabic) codes in young children. Moreover, we will discuss similarities and specificities of both codes and how they acquire semantic meaning in early stages of human development. Furthermore, we will elaborate on the comorbidity between math and reading difficulties in light of the interaction between the development of symbolic codes for words and numbers. Finally, we will integrate these lines of argument
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