Number lines can be more effective at facilitating adults' performance on health-related ratio problems than risk ladders and icon arrays

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

9-1-2023

Subject Area

Adult; Humans; COVID-19; Problem Solving; Health Behavior

Abstract

Visual displays, such as icon arrays and risk ladders, are often used to communicate numerical health information. Number lines improve reasoning with rational numbers but are seldom used in health contexts. College students solved ratio problems related to COVID-19 (e.g., number of deaths and number of cases) in one of four randomly assigned conditions: icon arrays, risk ladders, number lines, or no accompanying visual display. As predicted, number lines facilitated performance on these problems-the number line condition outperformed the other visual display conditions, which did not perform any better than the no visual display condition. In addition, higher performance on the health-related ratio problems was associated with higher COVID-19 worry for oneself and others, higher perceptions of COVID-19 severity, and higher endorsement of intentions to engage in preventive health behaviors, even when controlling for baseline math skills. These findings have important implications for effectively presenting health statistics. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Publication Title

Journal of experimental psychology. Applied

Volume

29

Issue

3

First Page

529

Last Page

543

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1037/xap0000456

PubMed ID

36326639

E-ISSN

1939-2192

Language

eng

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