Title of article :
What do Semi-Illiterate Adults Know About 2-Digit Arabic Numbers?
Author/Authors :
Wood، نويسنده , , Guilherme and Nuerk، نويسنده , , Hans C. and Freitas، نويسنده , , Patrيcia and Freitas، نويسنده , , Gianna and Willmes، نويسنده , , Klaus، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Brazilian semi-illiterates (n = 19) with 1 to 4 years of academic training compared 2-digit Arabic numbers. Like competent readers, semi-illiterates responded faster and more accurately when the larger number also had the larger unit digit (unit-decade compatibility). Even semi-illiterates with minimal academic training were sensitive to the unit-decade compatibility on number comparison. Probably semi-illiterates derive their ability to automatically activate unit-decade segmentation directly from the oral/verbal number representation. Interestingly, processing speed had an effect on two-digit number comparison. Faster participants showed a smaller or even inverted unit-decade compatibility. Processing speed reflects increased automatization of number segmentation and better selection of the decade-digits for comparison, what eliminates the semantic interference of units. In line with previous research, our data suggest that unit-decade segmentation plays a pervasive role in Arabic number comparison.
Keywords :
semi-illiterates , unit-decade compatibility effect , multidigit number magnitude , automaticity , processing speed