What Predicts Early Math in Autism? A Study of Cognitive and Linguistic Factors

被引:0
|
作者
Fernandez-Cobos, Raul [1 ]
Polo-Blanco, Irene [1 ]
Castroviejo, Elena [2 ]
Juncal-Ruiz, Maria [3 ,4 ]
Vicente, Agustin [2 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cantabria, Dept Math Stat & Comp Sci, Avda Castros 48, Santander 39005, Spain
[2] Univ Pais Vasco UPV EHU, Dept Linguist & Basque Studies, Paseo Univ 5, Vitoria 01006, Spain
[3] Sierrallana Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Child & Adolescent Mental Hlth Unit, Torrelavega, Spain
[4] Univ Cantabria, Dept Med & Psychiat, Inst Invest Marques Valdecilla IDIVAL, Avda Cardenal Herrera Oria S-N, Santander 39011, Spain
[5] Ikerbasque Basque Fdn Sci, Bilbao, Spain
关键词
Autism; Language; Mathematics; Non-verbal intelligence; PRESCHOOL PREDICTORS; EARLY NUMERACY; LANGUAGE; CHILDREN; MATHEMATICS; ACHIEVEMENT; SKILLS; IMPAIRMENT;
D O I
10.1007/s10803-025-06726-x
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
This study aimed to examine early mathematical abilities in young children with autism aged four to seven without intellectual disabilities and their connection with autism severity, non-verbal intelligence, and linguistic abilities (receptive vocabulary and grammar). The study involved 42 children with autism. We assessed participants' cognitive, mathematical, and linguistic abilities. Their mathematical performance was compared with that of typically developing children using standardized measures. Statistical analyses were conducted to identify potential cognitive or linguistic differences across groups based on mathematical performance, and to determine predictive factors for mathematical abilities in children with autism. The findings indicated a higher prevalence of mathematical difficulties among the participants compared to typically developing children. A classification based on mathematical performance revealed statistically significant differences in cognitive and linguistic variables across groups, particularly in the low-performance group. However, no significant differences were found according to autism severity between the groups. The analysis further identified that a combination of visuo-spatial and linguistic abilities was the most predictive factor for mathematical performance. The study suggests that young children with autism without intellectual disabilities may be more likely to experience mathematical difficulties compared to typically developing children. Assessing cognitive and linguistic abilities could serve as a predictive measure for mathematical difficulties of children with autism, even without a formal diagnosis. Future research, with larger samples or longitudinal approaches, could validate these findings or explore which specific mathematical abilities are more related to non-verbal intelligence and which ones to structural language.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Early Math Competence in Students with Autism
    Fernandez-Cobos, Raul
    Polo-Blanco, Irene
    EDUCATION AND TRAINING IN AUTISM AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES, 2024, 59 (02)
  • [2] Building the Early Number Sense of Kindergarteners With Autism: A Replication Study
    Root, Jenny R.
    Henning, Bonnie
    Jimenez, Bree
    REMEDIAL AND SPECIAL EDUCATION, 2020, 41 (06) : 378 - 388
  • [3] Quality of fathers' spatial concept support during block building predicts their daughters' early math skills - but not their sons'
    Thomson, Dana
    Casey, Beth M.
    Lombardi, Caitlin M.
    Hoa Nha Nguyen
    EARLY CHILDHOOD RESEARCH QUARTERLY, 2020, 50 : 51 - 64
  • [4] The Role of the Home Learning Environment on Early Cognitive and Non-Cognitive Outcomes in Math and Reading
    Vanbecelaere, Stefanie
    Matsuyama, Kanako
    Reynvoet, Bert
    Depaepe, Fien
    FRONTIERS IN EDUCATION, 2021, 6
  • [5] Social Cognitive Factors, Support, and Engagement: Early Adolescents' Math Interests as Precursors to Choice of Career
    Rowan-Kenyon, Heather T.
    Swan, Amy K.
    Creager, Marie F.
    CAREER DEVELOPMENT QUARTERLY, 2012, 60 (01) : 2 - 15
  • [6] Math Abilities Among Children with Neurodevelopmental Difficulties: Understanding Cognitive Factors and Evaluating a Pilot Intervention
    Mattson, Danielle
    Kryska, Kathryn
    Pei, Jacqueline
    Coles, Claire
    Kable, Julie
    Millians, Molly
    Andrew, Gail
    Cormier, Damien
    Rasmussen, Carmen
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 39 (03) : 247 - 265
  • [7] Associative Cognitive Factors of Math Problems in Students Diagnosed With Developmental Dyscalculia
    Van Luit, Johannes Erik Harold
    Toll, Sylke Wilhelmina Maria
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 9
  • [8] A Preliminary Study on Constructing A Cognitive-Linguistic Evaluation System Model
    Zhou, Yu
    Tang, Juxian
    Shang, Yaru
    Cheng, Wenwen
    Kang, Zihao
    Li, Jiangxuan
    Chen, Zhuoming
    Xiao, Duan
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH BEHAVIOR, 2023, 47 (06): : 1098 - 1111
  • [9] Cognitive and linguistic factors in reading acquisition
    Verhoeven, Ludo
    Reitsma, Pieter
    Siegel, Linda S.
    READING AND WRITING, 2011, 24 (04) : 387 - 394
  • [10] What Predicts Oral Narrative Competence Among African American Children? Exploring the Role of Linguistic and Cognitive Skills
    Gardner-Neblett, Nicole
    JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH, 2022, 65 (08): : 2931 - 2947