Innovative study produces first experimental evidence linking math anxiety, math avoidance

Innovative study produces first experimental evidence linking math anxiety, math avoidance
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Math anxiety is far from uncommon, but too often, those who dread the subject simply avoid it. Research from the University of Chicago offers new evidence for the link between math anxiety and avoidance—as well as possible paths toward breaking that connection.

UChicago psychologists found that people who are math-anxious often steer away from more difficult math problems, even when solving them leads to much larger monetary rewards.

"You can be motivated to do well in something, but still make suboptimal decisions in subtle ways," said UChicago doctoral student Jalisha Jenifer, who led the study with postdoctoral scholar Kyoung Whan Choe.

"Asking people to choose between easy, low-reward problems and hard, high-reward problems was an excellent way for us to see how individuals with math might make suboptimal decisions to avoid math in their everyday lives," Choe said.

Published Nov. 20 in Science Advances, the innovative study produced the first experimental evidence that math anxiety can predict math avoidance—a connection that was widely suggested but not verified by prior research.

Studying nearly 500 adults aged 18-35 through a computer program called the Choose-and-Solve Task (CAST), UChicago psychologists gave participants a choice between math and word problems labeled "easy" and "hard." The easy problems were always worth two cents, while the hard problems were worth up to six cents. They also informed participants that the computer-adaptive task would adjust to their individual abilities, enabling them to solve about 70% of the hard problems.

Although participants attempted "hard" word problems when promised higher monetary rewards, they rarely chose to do the same for math problems—that is, they behaved as if the costs of harder math outweighed its benefits, even when that wasn't the case.

These results suggest that fear and apprehension may hamper many people trying to improve their math skills. For example, someone seeking a good grade in a math class may spend too much time studying problems that don't challenge them.

The findings also indicate that math anxiety could affect everyday decisions such as calculating tips or change. Previous studies have suggested an anxiety-avoidance connection through the correlation of anxiety and the avoidance of math courses or STEM-related careers, rather than examining how people react directly to math problems.

The scholars hope that the CAST can be used with teens and children in order to help identify students who are likely to avoid putting effort into math. They are also conducting a follow-up study using functional MRI to examine participants who avoid hard math in the same task—which could reveal the brain mechanisms behind that suboptimal decision-making.

"Developing the CAST was only the first step toward investigating what drives people's decisions to avoid math," said Choe, a postdoc in UChicago's Department of Psychology and at the Mansueto Institute for Urban Innovation.

"People often say that being anxious about math is just a byproduct of being bad at it. Our research shows that isn't true," Beilock said. "Even when math-anxious people are capable of doing math, they avoid it, which means that educators and parents have to think about how we can lower math anxiety in our kids or we are going to miss students who are capable of success in math and science and just stay away from it."

Committed to making more accessible, the authors have made the task, data and analysis code from their study freely available on the Open Science Framework.

"This research is a great demonstration for how unique insights can be achieved by combining cutting-edge behavioral paradigms with novel psychological theories," said Berman, a leading cognitive neuroscientist who studies cognitive effort through brain imaging and computational models. "Similar paradigms can also be employed to study other effort-based decision-making tasks, such as the choice to exercise or eat healthier."

The researchers also discovered that not all participants who reported feeling math anxiety avoided difficult math problems. They hope to explore the reasons behind such behavior in future studies.

"We thought everyone who was anxious would avoid math, but math-anxious individuals don't appear to be a monolithic group," Jenifer said. "We are seeing individual differences in how math anxiety influences avoidance, which is an exciting finding that we hope to investigate further in later research."

Added Choe: "By understanding how some math-anxious individuals could overcome their tendency to avoid math, we will be able to turn the vicious cycle of into a virtuous cycle of success."

More information: Kyoung Whan Choe et al. Calculated avoidance: Math anxiety predicts math avoidance in effort-based decision-making, Science Advances (2019). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aay1062

Journal information: Science Advances

Citation: Innovative study produces first experimental evidence linking math anxiety, math avoidance (2019, November 21) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2019-11-experimental-evidence-linking-math-anxiety.html
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