![]() ; ; Greiff, Samuel ![]() in Frontiers in Psychology (2020) Detailed reference viewed: 44 (2 UL)![]() ![]() Emslander, Valentin ![]() Scientific Conference (2020) Measures of executive functions (inhibition, attention shifting, working memory) are linked to measures of mathematical skills in school students and adults. However, the magnitude of this relation in ... [more ▼] Measures of executive functions (inhibition, attention shifting, working memory) are linked to measures of mathematical skills in school students and adults. However, the magnitude of this relation in preschool children is unclear. Following the literature on the differentiation of cognitive skills over time, some researchers suggest that tests of executive functions and mathematical skills measure the same underlying construct, while others suggest that they measure correlated but distinct constructs. This dispute does not only tap the question of how the constructs can be understood but also the question of cost and test efficiency (i.e., assessments of single vs. multiple constructs). Clarifying the relation between measures of the two constructs can be especially challenging because preschoolers cannot fill in commonly used questionnaires that require them to read. Thus, researchers have to resort to behavioral, verbal, apparatus-, or computer-based assessments of executive functions. As a result, executive functions may vary in their relation to mathematical skills as a consequence of their measurement. We examined the link between executive functions and early mathematical skills measures, conducting a meta-analysis of 26 studies containing 238 effect sizes for a total sample of 24,256 preschool children. Specifically, we synthesized the corresponding correlations and aimed to clarify which executive function assessments were used for preschool children and how assessment characteristics may moderate the correlation between executive functions and mathematical skills. Three-level random-effects meta-analysis revealed a small to moderate average correlation between executive functions and mathematical skills measures of preschool children, r = 0.35. The type of assessment (behavioral, verbal, apparatus-, or computer-based assessments) did not moderate this relation. Investigating the three executive functions separately, we found average correlations of r = 0.31 between mathematical skills and inhibition, r = 0.38 between mathematical skills and attention shifting, and r = 0.36 between mathematical skills and updating. These analyses will be supplemented by further moderator and sensitivity analyses. These findings emphasize the significant link between executive functions and mathematical skills measures in preschoolers—hereby, supporting that the measures of both constructs are distinct. In addition, under-researched areas around the assessment of executive functions and mathematical abilities will be discussed. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 117 (7 UL)![]() Greiff, Samuel ![]() in Journal of Intelligence (2018) Detailed reference viewed: 225 (8 UL)![]() Greiff, Samuel ![]() in Computers in Human Behavior (2017), 76 Detailed reference viewed: 75 (3 UL)![]() Greiff, Samuel ![]() in OECD Education Working Papers (2017) Detailed reference viewed: 45 (0 UL)![]() ; ; Greiff, Samuel ![]() in Intelligence (2017), 64 Detailed reference viewed: 176 (7 UL)![]() ; Greiff, Samuel ![]() in Computers in Human Behavior (2017) Detailed reference viewed: 90 (5 UL)![]() ; Greiff, Samuel ![]() in Computers in Human Behavior (2017), 76 Detailed reference viewed: 49 (1 UL)![]() ![]() ; Greiff, Samuel ![]() Scientific Conference (2016, November 08) Detailed reference viewed: 162 (6 UL)![]() ![]() Niepel, Christoph ![]() ![]() Scientific Conference (2016, July) Detailed reference viewed: 138 (5 UL)![]() Greiff, Samuel ![]() ![]() in Computers in Human Behavior (2016), 61 Computer-based assessments of complex problem solving (CPS) that have been used in international large-scale surveys require students to engage in an in-depth interaction with the problem environment. In ... [more ▼] Computer-based assessments of complex problem solving (CPS) that have been used in international large-scale surveys require students to engage in an in-depth interaction with the problem environment. In this, they evoke manifest sequences of overt behavior that are stored in computer-generated logfiles. In the present study, we explored the relation between several overt behaviors, which N=1476 Finnish ninth-grade students (mean age=15.23,SD=.47 years) exhibited when exploring a CPS environment, and their CPS performance. We used the MicroDYN approach to measure CPS and inspected students' behaviors through log-file analyses. Results indicated that students who occasionally observed the problem environment in a noninterfering way in addition to actively exploring it (noninterfering observation) showed better CPS performance, whereas students who showed a high frequency of (potentially unplanned) interventions (intervention frequency) exhibited worse CPS performance. Additionally, both too much and too little time spent on a CPS task (time on task) was associated with poor CPS performance. The observed effects held after controlling for students' use of an exploration strategy that required a sequence of multiple interventions (VOTAT strategy) indicating that these behaviors exhibited incremental effects on CPS performance beyond the use of VOTAT. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 366 (28 UL)![]() ![]() ; Greiff, Samuel ![]() Scientific Conference (2015, April) Detailed reference viewed: 94 (2 UL)![]() ; Greiff, Samuel ![]() in Intelligence (2015), 48 Detailed reference viewed: 159 (7 UL) |
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