Spatial Anxiety: A Novel Questionnaire With Subscales for Measuring Three Aspects of Spatial Anxiety

Spatial skills are a strong predictor of achievement and pursuit of employment in STEM fields. However, some individuals experience anxiety arising from situations that require performing spatial tasks in an evaluative context, and as a result, may avoid spatial related mental activities and exposur...

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Main Authors: Ian M. Lyons, Gerardo Ramirez, Erin A. Maloney, Danielle N. Rendina, Susan C. Levine, Sian L. Beilock
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen GOLD/ Leibniz Insitute for Psychology 2018-12-01
Series:Journal of Numerical Cognition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jnc.psychopen.eu/article/view/154
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author Ian M. Lyons
Gerardo Ramirez
Erin A. Maloney
Danielle N. Rendina
Susan C. Levine
Sian L. Beilock
author_facet Ian M. Lyons
Gerardo Ramirez
Erin A. Maloney
Danielle N. Rendina
Susan C. Levine
Sian L. Beilock
author_sort Ian M. Lyons
collection DOAJ
description Spatial skills are a strong predictor of achievement and pursuit of employment in STEM fields. However, some individuals experience anxiety arising from situations that require performing spatial tasks in an evaluative context, and as a result, may avoid spatial related mental activities and exposure to spatially relevant experiences. We sought to generate and validate an instrument capable of reliably measuring individual differences in experiences of spatial anxiety. We developed a spatial anxiety data-driven approach, wherein an exploratory factor analysis was conducted within the framework for different types of spatial skills outlined by Uttal et al. (2013; https://doi.org/10.1037/a0028446). In Study 1, factor analyses revealed that items loaded on three factors that corresponded well with some of the most common spatial abilities that have been discussed in the broader literature: navigation, mental-manipulation and imagery. The three subscales were high in internal reliability and between-scale selectivity. Study 2 then established that external validity was good for the navigation and manipulation subscales: higher anxiety ratings uniquely predicted lower objective performance and lower attitude/ability ratings on established measures within the respective subdomains. External validity was acceptable for the imagery subscale, uniquely predicting lower attitude/ability ratings on an established spatial imagery questionnaire. The overall result is an empirically validated Spatial Anxiety scale for use with adults that also respects the multifaceted nature of spatial processing. This questionnaire has the potential to provide a more comprehensive screening tool for spatial anxiety, and is a step toward identifying potential barriers to STEM education.
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spelling doaj.art-b54dcc6ed6594e9e972c5f72ffc8bfe02023-01-02T09:36:53ZengPsychOpen GOLD/ Leibniz Insitute for PsychologyJournal of Numerical Cognition2363-87612018-12-014352655310.5964/jnc.v4i3.154jnc.v4i3.154Spatial Anxiety: A Novel Questionnaire With Subscales for Measuring Three Aspects of Spatial AnxietyIan M. Lyons0Gerardo Ramirez1Erin A. Maloney2Danielle N. Rendina3Susan C. Levine4Sian L. Beilock5Department of Psychology, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USADepartment of Educational Psychology, Ball State University, Muncie, IN, USASchool of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, CanadaDepartment of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USADepartment of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USADepartment of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USASpatial skills are a strong predictor of achievement and pursuit of employment in STEM fields. However, some individuals experience anxiety arising from situations that require performing spatial tasks in an evaluative context, and as a result, may avoid spatial related mental activities and exposure to spatially relevant experiences. We sought to generate and validate an instrument capable of reliably measuring individual differences in experiences of spatial anxiety. We developed a spatial anxiety data-driven approach, wherein an exploratory factor analysis was conducted within the framework for different types of spatial skills outlined by Uttal et al. (2013; https://doi.org/10.1037/a0028446). In Study 1, factor analyses revealed that items loaded on three factors that corresponded well with some of the most common spatial abilities that have been discussed in the broader literature: navigation, mental-manipulation and imagery. The three subscales were high in internal reliability and between-scale selectivity. Study 2 then established that external validity was good for the navigation and manipulation subscales: higher anxiety ratings uniquely predicted lower objective performance and lower attitude/ability ratings on established measures within the respective subdomains. External validity was acceptable for the imagery subscale, uniquely predicting lower attitude/ability ratings on an established spatial imagery questionnaire. The overall result is an empirically validated Spatial Anxiety scale for use with adults that also respects the multifaceted nature of spatial processing. This questionnaire has the potential to provide a more comprehensive screening tool for spatial anxiety, and is a step toward identifying potential barriers to STEM education.http://jnc.psychopen.eu/article/view/154spatial anxietySpatial Anxiety Questionnairespatial processingspatial attitudesindividual differences
spellingShingle Ian M. Lyons
Gerardo Ramirez
Erin A. Maloney
Danielle N. Rendina
Susan C. Levine
Sian L. Beilock
Spatial Anxiety: A Novel Questionnaire With Subscales for Measuring Three Aspects of Spatial Anxiety
Journal of Numerical Cognition
spatial anxiety
Spatial Anxiety Questionnaire
spatial processing
spatial attitudes
individual differences
title Spatial Anxiety: A Novel Questionnaire With Subscales for Measuring Three Aspects of Spatial Anxiety
title_full Spatial Anxiety: A Novel Questionnaire With Subscales for Measuring Three Aspects of Spatial Anxiety
title_fullStr Spatial Anxiety: A Novel Questionnaire With Subscales for Measuring Three Aspects of Spatial Anxiety
title_full_unstemmed Spatial Anxiety: A Novel Questionnaire With Subscales for Measuring Three Aspects of Spatial Anxiety
title_short Spatial Anxiety: A Novel Questionnaire With Subscales for Measuring Three Aspects of Spatial Anxiety
title_sort spatial anxiety a novel questionnaire with subscales for measuring three aspects of spatial anxiety
topic spatial anxiety
Spatial Anxiety Questionnaire
spatial processing
spatial attitudes
individual differences
url http://jnc.psychopen.eu/article/view/154
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