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Severe developmental dyscalculia is characterized by core deficits in both symbolic and nonsymbolic number sense

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posted on 2022-11-02, 11:10 authored by Gisella Decarli, Francesco SellaFrancesco Sella, Silvia Lanfranchi, Giulia Gerotto, Silvia Gerola, Giuseppe Cossu, Marco Zorzi
A long-standing debate concerns whether developmental dyscalculia is characterized by core deficits in processing nonsymbolic or symbolic numerical information as well as the role of domain-general difficulties. Heterogeneity in recruitment and diagnostic criteria make it difficult to disentangle this issue. Here, we selected children ( n = 58) with severely compromised mathematical skills (2 SD below average) but average domain-general skills from a large sample referred for clinical assessment of learning disabilities. From the same sample, we selected a control group of children ( n = 42) matched for IQ, age, and visuospatial memory but with average mathematical skills. Children with dyscalculia showed deficits in both symbolic and nonsymbolic number sense assessed with simple computerized tasks. Performance in the digit-comparison task and the numerosity match-to-sample task reliably separated children with developmental dyscalculia from controls in cross-validated logistic regression (area under the curve = .84). These results support a number-sense-deficit theory and highlight basic numerical abilities that could be targeted for early identification of at-risk children as well as for intervention.

Funding

Cariparo Foundation Excellence Grant (NUMSENSE)

History

School

  • Science

Department

  • Mathematics Education Centre

Published in

Psychological Science

Volume

34

Issue

1

Pages

8 - 21

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© The Authors

Publisher statement

This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Psychological Science and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1177/09567976221097947. Users who receive access to an article through a repository are reminded that the article is protected by copyright and reuse is restricted to non-commercial and no derivative uses. Users may also download and save a local copy of an article accessed in an institutional repository for the user's personal reference. For permission to reuse an article, please follow our Process for Requesting Permission: https://uk.sagepub.com/en-gb/eur/process-for-requesting-permission

Acceptance date

2022-04-05

Publication date

2022-10-25

Copyright date

2022

ISSN

0956-7976

eISSN

1467-9280

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Francesco Sella. Deposit date: 1 November 2022

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