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keywords:
embodied cognition
problem solving
eye tracking
psychology
reasoning
Algebra is powerful but difficult. It requires reasoning about abstract relations among symbolic variables. How do we do it? On one account, algebraic expertise is a kind of visual expertise: Experts learn to deploy their attention in ways that reflect the equation’s hierarchical structure. Here, we tested this account by tracking participants’ eye movements while they viewed algebraic expressions. On Algebra trials, participants judged the algebraic equivalence of two expressions. On Search trials, participants viewed the same expressions but had to verify the location of letters, a non-algebraic task. Despite viewing identical visual displays on both tasks, participants shifted their gaze in systematically different ways. When interacting with the expressions algebraically, participants’ eye movements reflected the expression’s algebraic structure. Despite algebra’s abstractness, its practice may depend on the embodied skill of shifting one’s gaze in strategic ways. This perspective can inform mathematics education and theories of abstract reasoning.