Give yourself a hand: The role of gesture and working memory in preschoolers’ numerical knowledge

•Preschool children’s gestures, working memory, and cardinality ability were studied.•Children’s gestures related to their cardinality knowledge.•Children’s working memory related to their cardinality knowledge, but not gestures.•Low-income children use gestures in similar ways to higher-income chil...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental child psychology 2021-08, Vol.208, p.105145-105145, Article 105145
Hauptverfasser: Gordon, Raychel, Scalise, Nicole R., Ramani, Geetha B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Preschool children’s gestures, working memory, and cardinality ability were studied.•Children’s gestures related to their cardinality knowledge.•Children’s working memory related to their cardinality knowledge, but not gestures.•Low-income children use gestures in similar ways to higher-income children. Hand gestures can be beneficial in math contexts to reduce the user’s cognitive load by supporting domain-general abilities such as working memory. Although prior work has shown a strong relation between young children’s early math performance and their general cognitive abilities, it is important to consider how children’s working memory ability may relate to their use of spontaneous gesture as well as their math-specific abilities. The current study examined how preschool-aged children’s gesture use and working memory relate to their performance on an age-appropriate math task. Head Start preschoolers (N = 81) were videotaped while completing a modified version of the Give-N task to measure their cardinality understanding. Children also completed a forward word span task and a computerized Corsi Block task to assess their working memory. The results showed that children’s spontaneous gesture use and working memory were related to their performance on the cardinality task. However, children’s gestures were not significantly related to working memory after controlling for age. Findings suggest that young children from low-income backgrounds use gestures during math contexts in similar ways to preschoolers from higher-income backgrounds.
ISSN:0022-0965
1096-0457
DOI:10.1016/j.jecp.2021.105145