Why Sense-Making through Magnitude May Be Harder for Fractions than for Whole Numbers

Eliane Wiese, Rony Patel, Kenneth R. Koedinger. Why Sense-Making through Magnitude May Be Harder for Fractions than for Whole Numbers. In Anna Papafragou, Daniel Grodner, Daniel Mirman, John C. Trueswell, editors, Proceedings of the 38th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, Recogbizing and Representing Events, CogSci 2016, Philadelphia, PA, USA, August 10-13, 2016. cognitivesciencesociety.org, 2016. [doi]

@inproceedings{WiesePK16a,
  title = {Why Sense-Making through Magnitude May Be Harder for Fractions than for Whole Numbers},
  author = {Eliane Wiese and Rony Patel and Kenneth R. Koedinger},
  year = {2016},
  url = {https://mindmodeling.org/cogsci2016/papers/0220/index.html},
  researchr = {https://researchr.org/publication/WiesePK16a},
  cites = {0},
  citedby = {0},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the 38th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, Recogbizing and Representing Events, CogSci 2016, Philadelphia, PA, USA, August 10-13, 2016},
  editor = {Anna Papafragou and Daniel Grodner and Daniel Mirman and John C. Trueswell},
  publisher = {cognitivesciencesociety.org},
  isbn = {978-0-9911967-3-9},
}