Response inhibition deficits in math-anxious individuals.

Ann N Y Acad Sci

Department of Social Psychology and Quantitative Psychology (Quantitative Psychology Section), Faculty of Psychology, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the link between math anxiety and response inhibition, focusing on whether the inhibition deficit is specific to numerical tasks or more general.
  • Participants included 28 individuals with high math anxiety (HMA) and 28 with low math anxiety (LMA) who completed both numerical and non-numerical Go/Nogo tasks while their performance and brain activity were measured.
  • The findings revealed that HMA individuals struggled more with inhibiting responses in numerical tasks compared to LMA individuals, indicating a specific impairment in their ability to manage response inhibition when engaged with numbers, potentially explaining their challenges in math.

Article Abstract

We examined whether math anxiety is related to a response inhibition deficit and, if so, whether it is a domain-specific inhibition deficit in numerical tasks or a general inhibition deficit. Behavioral performance and electroencephalogram activity were recorded while 28 highly math-anxious (HMA) and 28 low math-anxious (LMA) individuals performed both a numerical and a non-numerical Go/Nogo task. In the numerical task, single-digit numbers were presented, and participants were asked to press a button if the number was even. In the non-numerical task, letters were presented, and the button had to be pressed if the letter was a vowel. Nogo trials were answered less accurately and elicited larger Nogo-N2 and Nogo-P3 than Go trials in both tasks and both groups. Importantly, behavioral and brain response differences between tasks were only found in the HMA group. First, they were more error-prone in numerical Nogo than in non-numerical Nogo trials; and second, their Nogo-N2 and N2d (Nogo-Go difference) were smaller in the numerical task than in the non-numerical task. No differences were found in the LMA group. These results suggest that HMA individuals' response inhibition is impaired specifically when dealing with numbers, which could contribute to their low achievement in math tasks.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nyas.15216DOI Listing

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