The mathematical abilities of children with cochlear implants |
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Authors: | Alexandra Edwards Lindsey Edwards Dawn Langdon |
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Affiliation: | 1. Psychosocial and Family Services , Great Ormond Street Hospital , London , United Kingdom Alexandra.Edwards@gosh.nhs.uk;3. Psychosocial and Family Services , Great Ormond Street Hospital , London , United Kingdom;4. Department of Psychology , Royal Holloway, University of London , Egham , United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | Research has shown that cochlear implants give rise to improvements in speech recognition and production in children with profound hearing loss but very few studies have explored mathematical abilities in these children. The current study compared the mathematical abilities of 24 children with cochlear implants (mean age 10 years 1 month) to a control group of 22 hearing children (mean age 9 years 8 months). The math questions were categorized into questions that tapped into arithmetic or geometrical reasoning. It was predicted that the cochlear implant group would perform below the hearing group on the arithmetic questions but not the geometrical reasoning questions. Unexpectedly, the results showed that the cochlear implant group performed significantly below the hearing group on both types of math questions, but that this difference was mediated by language skill as assessed by vocabulary knowledge. The clinical implications of these results and possible future research results are considered. |
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Keywords: | Cochlear implant Deaf Hearing loss Math Children |
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