PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Girls' verbal skills make them better at arithmetic

2012-02-24
(Press-News.org) While boys generally do better than girls in science and math, some studies have found that girls do better in arithmetic. A new study published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, finds that the advantage comes from girls' superior verbal skills.

"People have always thought that males' advantage is in math and spatial skills, and girls' advantage is in language," says Xinlin Zhou of Beijing Normal University, who cowrote the study with Wei Wei, Hao Lu, Hui Zhao, and Qi Dong of Beijing Normal University and Chuansheng Chen of the University of California-Irvine. "However, some parents and teachers in China say girls do arithmetic better than boys in primary school."

Zhou and his colleagues did a series of tests with children ages 8 to 11 at 12 primary schools in and around Beijing. Indeed, girls outperformed boys in many math skills. They were better at arithmetic, including tasks like simple subtraction and complex multiplication. Girls were also better at numerosity comparison—making a quick estimate of which of two arrays had more dots in it. Girls outperformed boys at quickly recognizing the larger of two numbers and at completing a series of numbers (like "2 4 6 8"). Boys performed better at mentally rotating three-dimensional images.

Girls were also better at judging whether two words rhymed, and Zhou and his colleagues think this is the key to their better math performance. "Arithmetic and even advanced math needs verbal processing," Zhou says. Counting is verbal; the multiplication table is memorized verbally, and when people are doing multiple-digit calculations, they hold the intermediate results in their memory as words.

"Better language skills could lead to more efficient verbal processing in arithmetic," Zhou says. He thinks it might be possible to use these results to help both boys and girls learn math better. Boys could use more help with verbal strategies for learning math terms, while girls might benefit from more practice with spatial skills.

INFORMATION:

For more information about this study, please contact: Xinlin Zhou at zhou_xinlin@bnu.edu.cn.

The APS journal Psychological Science is the highest ranked empirical journal in psychology. For a copy of the article "Gender differences in children's arithmetic performance are accounted for by gender differences in language abilities" and access to other Psychological Science research findings, please contact Lucy Hyde at 202-293-9300 or lhyde@psychologicalscience.org.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Molding the business end of neurotoxins

2012-02-24
San Diego, Calif. – For snakes, spiders, and other venomous creatures, the "business end," or active part, of a toxin is the area on the surface of a protein that is most likely to undergo rapid evolution in response to environmental constraints, say researchers from Ben Gurion University in Israel. Understanding these evolutionary forces can help researchers predict which part of unstudied toxins will do damage, and may also aid in the design of novel synthetic proteins with tailored pharmaceutical properties. The team will present its results at the 56th Annual Meeting ...

For Latina moms, pediatrician's personality, empathy trump knowledge of Spanish, quick service

2012-02-24
A small study of Latina women with young children led by researchers at Johns Hopkins Children's Center shows moms value a pediatrician's empathy and warmth far more than their ability to speak Spanish or other conveniences. A report on the findings is published online Feb. 15 in Maternal and Child Health Journal. The lead investigator a pediatrics fellow at Johns Hopkins, conducted the research during post-residency training at the University of Michigan as a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholar. The study involved interviews with 38 Latina mothers with ...

Fast-food menu calorie counts legally compliant but not as helpful to consumers as they should be

2012-02-24
Calorie listings on fast-food chain restaurant menus might meet federal labeling requirements but don't do a good job of helping consumers trying to make healthy meal choices, a new Columbia University School of Nursing (CUSON) study reports. The study, by Elizabeth Gross Cohn, RN, NP, DNSc, assistant professor of nursing at CUSON, and colleagues, was published online on February 16, 2012, in the Journal of Urban Health. The researchers studied the calorie counts for 200 food items on menu boards in fast-food chain restaurants in the New York inner-city neighborhood of ...

Protein assassin

2012-02-24
San Diego, Calif. – When bacteria wage a turf war, some of the combatants have an extra weapon. Certain strains of the bacteria E. coli produce proteins that kill competing E. coli and other like microbes, and researchers from Newcastle University in England have recently discovered something surprising about one of these lethal proteins: even after the toxic folded portion of the protein is removed, the unfolded end is still deadly. The finding may one day help scientists find new, more targeted ways to kill antibiotic-resistant microbes. The researchers will present their ...

Investigation links deaths to paint-stripping chemical

Investigation links deaths to paint-stripping chemical
2012-02-24
EAST LANSING, Mich. — The deaths of at least 13 workers who were refinishing bathtubs have been linked to a chemical used in products to strip surfaces of paint and other finishes. An investigation started by researchers at Michigan State University in 2011 has found that 13 deaths since 2000 – including three in Michigan – involved the use of paint-stripping products containing methylene chloride, a highly volatile, colorless and toxic chemical that is widely used as a degreaser and paint stripper. The chemical, in addition to being used in industrial settings, is available ...

Lloyds TSB Launches Junior Cash ISA at 3% and Calls on the Government to Open Up Accounts to All Parents

2012-02-24
Lloyds TSB today announces that it will offer a Junior Cash ISA, making it the first of the major high street banks to do so. - Lloyds TSB is the first of the major high street banks to announce a Junior Cash ISA - Account available from 13th February, meaning parents can take full advantage of the GBP3,600 annual Junior ISA allowance for 2011 / 2012 - New research indicates young adults increasingly reliant on financial support from their parents in their adult life - Lloyds TSB urges the Government to allow parents to transfer Child Trust Fund accounts to Junior ...

Engineers improve allocation of limited health care resources in resource-poor nations

Engineers improve allocation of limited health care resources in resource-poor nations
2012-02-24
In the developing world, allocating limited health care resources as effectively and equitably as possible is a top priority. To address that need, systems engineers at the Georgia Institute of Technology are using computer models to help resource-poor nations improve supply chain decisions related to the distribution of breast milk and non-pharmaceutical interventions for malaria. They are also forecasting what health care services would be available in the event of natural disasters in Caribbean nations. "We are using mathematical models implemented in user-friendly ...

The Bar Code News Offers Increased Subscription Options: Free Daily, Weekly, Monthly E-News and Quarterly Print Editions

The Bar Code News Offers Increased Subscription Options: Free Daily, Weekly, Monthly E-News and Quarterly Print Editions
2012-02-24
The Bar Code News (www.barcode.com)--the online magazine dedicated to being the "Go-To Site for everything Bar Code "-- recently announced new email subscription options. Subscribers can now opt for free daily, weekly, or monthly electronic newsletters delivered to their email inbox. Free quarterly print editions of The Bar Code News will also be sent, beginning in 2012, to those who enter a valid mailing address into the subscription form. The Bar Code News, owned by Barcode Media Group, Inc., offers industry news, case studies, educational resources, videos, ...

Proteins behaving badly

2012-02-24
San Diego, Calif. – Several neurodegenerative diseases – including Alzheimer's and ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease) – are caused when the body's own proteins fold incorrectly, recruit and convert healthy proteins to the misfolded form, and aggregate in large clumps that gum up the works of the nervous system. "For Star Trek fans, this is like the Borg, [a fictional race of cyborgs that abduct and assimilate humans and other species]," says Steven Plotkin, a biophysicist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver who studies the process of protein misfolding. Plotkin's ...

Discovery opens door to low-cost 'negative refraction,' new products and industries

2012-02-24
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Researchers at Oregon State University have discovered a way to make a low-cost material that might accomplish negative refraction of light and other radiation – a goal first theorized in 1861 by a giant of science, Scottish physicist James Maxwell, that has still eluded wide practical use. Other materials can do this but they are based on costly, complex crystalline materials. A low-cost way that yields the same result will have extraordinary possibilities, experts say – ranging from a "super lens" to energy harvesting, machine vision or "stealth" coatings ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

From rice fields to fresh air: Transforming agricultural waste into a shield against indoor pollution

University of Houston study offers potential new targets to identify, remediate dyslexia

Scientists uncover hidden role of microalgae in spreading antibiotic resistance in waterways

Turning orange waste into powerful water-cleaning material

Papadelis to lead new pediatric brain research center

Power of tiny molecular 'flycatcher' surprises through disorder

Before crisis strikes — smartwatch tracks triggers for opioid misuse

Statins do not cause the majority of side effects listed in package leaflets

UC Riverside doctoral student awarded prestigious DOE fellowship

UMD team finds E. coli, other pathogens in Potomac River after sewage spill

New vaccine platform promotes rare protective B cells

Apes share human ability to imagine

Major step toward a quantum-secure internet demonstrated over city-scale distance

Increasing toxicity trends impede progress in global pesticide reduction commitments

Methane jump wasn’t just emissions — the atmosphere (temporarily) stopped breaking it down

Flexible governance for biological data is needed to reduce AI’s biosecurity risks

Increasing pesticide toxicity threatens UN goal of global biodiversity protection by 2030

How “invisible” vaccine scaffolding boosts HIV immune response

Study reveals the extent of rare earthquakes in deep layer below Earth’s crust

Boston College scientists help explain why methane spiked in the early 2020s

Penn Nursing study identifies key predictors for chronic opioid use following surgery

KTU researcher’s study: Why Nobel Prize-level materials have yet to reach industry

Research spotlight: Interplay of hormonal contraceptive use, stress and cardiovascular risk in women

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Catherine Prater awarded postdoctoral fellowship from the American Heart Association

AI agents debate more effectively when given personalities and the ability to interrupt

Tenecteplase for acute non–large vessel occlusion 4.5 to 24 hours after ischemic stroke

Immune 'hijacking' predicts cancer evolution

VIP-2 experiment narrows the search for exotic physics beyond the Pauli exclusion principle

A global challenge posed by the presence of pharmaceuticals in the environment

Dream engineering can help solve ‘puzzling’ questions

[Press-News.org] Girls' verbal skills make them better at arithmetic