Hitting the Target: Mathematical Attainment in Children Is Related to Interceptive-Timing Ability

Author:

Giles Oscar T.12ORCID,Shire Katy A.13,Hill Liam J. B.1,Mushtaq Faisal1,Waterman Amanda1,Holt Raymond J.4,Culmer Peter R.4,Williams Justin H. G.5,Wilkie Richard M.1,Mon-Williams Mark136

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, University of Leeds

2. Institute for Transport Studies, University of Leeds

3. Bradford Institute for Health Research, Bradford Teaching Hospitals Foundation Trust, Bradford, United Kingdom

4. School of Mechanical Engineering, University of Leeds

5. Institute of Medical Sciences, University of Aberdeen

6. National Centre for Vision, University of Southeast Norway

Abstract

Interceptive timing is a fundamental ability underpinning numerous actions (e.g., ball catching), but its development and relationship with other cognitive functions remain poorly understood. Piaget suggested that children need to learn the physical rules that govern their environment before they can represent abstract concepts such as number and time. Thus, learning how objects move in space and time may underpin the development of related abstract representations (i.e., mathematics). To test this hypothesis, we captured objective measures of interceptive timing in 309 primary school children (5–11 years old), alongside scores for general motor skill and national standardized academic attainment. Bayesian estimation showed that interceptive timing (but not general motor capability) uniquely predicted mathematical ability even after we controlled for age, reading, and writing attainment. This finding demonstrates that interceptive timing is distinct from other motor skills with specificity in predicting childhood mathematical ability independently of other forms of attainment and motor capability.

Funder

National Institute for Health Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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