Sources of variation in preschoolers’ relational reasoning: The interaction between language use and working memory

•We examined language- and working memory-related sources of variation on Turkish-learning preschoolers’ relational reasoning.•Children using more relational language and background-focused scene descriptions performed worse in the relational reasoning task.•Children with less frequent relational la...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental child psychology 2024-12, Vol.252, p.106149, Article 106149
Hauptverfasser: Esmer, Şeref Can, Turan, Eylül, Karadöller, Dilay Z., Göksun, Tilbe
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We examined language- and working memory-related sources of variation on Turkish-learning preschoolers’ relational reasoning.•Children using more relational language and background-focused scene descriptions performed worse in the relational reasoning task.•Children with less frequent relational language use and focal object descriptions of the scenes benefited more from working memory.•The ways children strengthen their relational reasoning skills may depend on interactive effects of different cognitive mechanisms. Previous research has suggested the importance of relational language and working memory in children’s relational reasoning. The tendency to use language (e.g., using more relational than object-focused language, prioritizing focal objects over background in linguistic descriptions) could reflect children’s biases toward the relational versus object-based solutions in a relational match-to-sample (RMTS) task. In the lack of any apparent object match as a foil option, object-focused children might rely on other cognitive mechanisms (i.e., working memory) to choose a relational match in the RMTS task. The current study examined the interactive roles of language- and working memory-related sources of variation in Turkish-learning preschoolers’ relational reasoning. We collected data from 4- and 5-year-olds (N = 41) via Zoom in the RMTS task, a scene description task, and a backward word span task. Generalized binomial mixed effects models revealed that children who used more relational language and background-focused scene descriptions performed worse in the relational reasoning task. Furthermore, children with less frequent relational language use and focal object descriptions of the scenes benefited more from working memory to succeed in the relational reasoning task. These results suggest additional working memory demands for object-focused children to choose relational matches in the RMTS task, highlighting the importance of examining the interactive effects of different cognitive mechanisms on relational reasoning.
ISSN:0022-0965
1096-0457
1096-0457
DOI:10.1016/j.jecp.2024.106149