Researchers: Math anxiety saps working memory needed to do math


Worrying about how you'll perform on a math test may actually contribute to a lower test score, U.S. researchers said on Saturday.

POSTED: 1:14 p.m. EST, February 20, 2007
Reuters.com (as appeared on CNN.com )



SAN FRANCISCO, California -- Math anxiety -- feelings of dread and fear and avoiding math -- can sap the brain's limited amount of working capacity, a resource needed to compute difficult math problems, said Mark Ashcroft, a psychologist at the University of Nevada Las Vegas who studies the problem.

"It turns out that math anxiety occupies a person's working memory," said Ashcroft, who spoke on a panel at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in San Francisco.

Ashcroft said while easy math tasks such as addition require only a small fraction of a person's working memory, harder computations require much more.

Worrying about math takes up a large chunk of a person's working memory stores as well, spelling disaster for the anxious student who is taking a high-stakes test.

Stress about how one does on tests like college entrance exams can make even good math students choke. "All of a sudden they start looking for the short cuts," said University of Chicago researcher Sian Beilock.

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Posted: Wed - February 21, 2007 at 11:06 AM          


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