TY - JOUR
T1 - Diverse mathematical knowledge among indigenous Amazonians
AU - O’Shaughnessy, David M.
AU - Cruz Cordero, Tania
AU - Mollica, Francis
AU - Boni, Isabelle
AU - Jara-Ettinger, Julian
AU - Gibson, Edward
AU - Piantadosi, Steven T.
N1 - Funding Information:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. This work was supported by Grant 1760874 from the NSF, Division of Research on Learning (to S.T.P.), and Award 1901262 from the NSF (to D.M.O. and S.T.P.). We also acknowledge that the work could not have been conducted without the help of the Centro Boliviano de Investigacion y Desarrollo Socio Integral (CBIDSI) and, in particular, Tomás Huanca and Manuel Roca.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 the Author(s).
PY - 2023/8/29
Y1 - 2023/8/29
N2 - We investigate number and arithmetic learning among a Bolivian indigenous people, the Tsimane’, for whom formal schooling is comparatively recent in history and variable in both extent and consistency. We first present a large-scale meta-analysis on child number development involving over 800 Tsimane’ children. The results emphasize the impact of formal schooling: Children are only found to be full counters when they have attended school, suggesting the importance of cultural support for early mathematics. We then test especially remote Tsimane’ communities and document the development of specialized arithmetical knowledge in the absence of direct formal education. Specifically, we describe individuals who succeed on arithmetic problems involving the number five—which has a distinct role in the local economy—even though they do not succeed on some lower numbers. Some of these participants can perform multiplication with fives at greater accuracy than addition by one. These results highlight the importance of cultural factors in early mathematics and suggest that psychological theories of number where quantities are derived from lower numbers via repeated addition (e.g., a successor function) are unlikely to explain the diversity of human mathematical ability.
AB - We investigate number and arithmetic learning among a Bolivian indigenous people, the Tsimane’, for whom formal schooling is comparatively recent in history and variable in both extent and consistency. We first present a large-scale meta-analysis on child number development involving over 800 Tsimane’ children. The results emphasize the impact of formal schooling: Children are only found to be full counters when they have attended school, suggesting the importance of cultural support for early mathematics. We then test especially remote Tsimane’ communities and document the development of specialized arithmetical knowledge in the absence of direct formal education. Specifically, we describe individuals who succeed on arithmetic problems involving the number five—which has a distinct role in the local economy—even though they do not succeed on some lower numbers. Some of these participants can perform multiplication with fives at greater accuracy than addition by one. These results highlight the importance of cultural factors in early mathematics and suggest that psychological theories of number where quantities are derived from lower numbers via repeated addition (e.g., a successor function) are unlikely to explain the diversity of human mathematical ability.
KW - mathematical cognition
KW - education
KW - arithmetic development
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2215999120
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2215999120
M3 - Article
C2 - 37603761
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 120
SP - 1
EP - 11
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
IS - 35
M1 - e2215999120
ER -