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The emergence of “groupitizing” in children’s numerical cognition

•Grouping items into subsets in the subitizing range can speed children’s enumeration.•Grouping effects are absent in kindergarten, yet strengthen across grades 1–3.•Set size effects for grouped arrays are clear in K and first, but absent in second and third grades.•Set size slope for enumerating gr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of experimental child psychology 2014-10, Vol.126, p.120-137
Main Authors: Starkey, Gillian S., McCandliss, Bruce D.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Grouping items into subsets in the subitizing range can speed children’s enumeration.•Grouping effects are absent in kindergarten, yet strengthen across grades 1–3.•Set size effects for grouped arrays are clear in K and first, but absent in second and third grades.•Set size slope for enumerating grouped arrays uniquely predicts math fluency.•The emergence of “groupitizing” represents a unique contribution to enumeration and mathematics. Improvements in enumeration abilities that emerge over late childhood are primarily thought to reflect perceptual developments such as increases in subitizing limits for small sets and faster shifting of attention associated with serially counting larger sets. Contributions of conceptual knowledge development, such as the growing appreciation of how whole numbers are composed of subsets of whole numbers, are not as well understood. This study examined the emergence of a process referred to as “groupitizing,” which captures how children may capitalize on grouping information to facilitate enumeration processes. We examined enumeration speed in a cross-sectional sample of children (N=378), spanning kindergarten through third grade, using arrays of dots. Arrays were either unstructured or grouped by proximity into subsets in the subitizing range (i.e., three subgroups of 1–3 items). Kindergarten children showed no evidence of grouping structure on enumeration. First-grade children enumerated grouped arrays faster than unstructured arrays. This structure effect grew progressively stronger in subsequent grades. Enumeration speed for unstructured arrays increased with set size, yet for grouped arrays the impact of set size was dependent on grade level. For kindergartners, the grouping manipulation had no impact on the effect of set size. For older children, the grouping manipulation reduced the effect of set size on enumeration. Furthermore, individual differences in how set size affected enumeration of grouped arrays showed unique patterns of association with performance on standardized symbolic arithmetic fluency tests, suggesting a unique role for the construct of groupitizing in the development of enumeration fluency and symbolic math skills.
ISSN:0022-0965
1096-0457
DOI:10.1016/j.jecp.2014.03.006