Contextual support for children’s recall within working memory

Measures of working memory capacity (WMC) are extremely popular, yet we know relatively little about the specific processes that support recall. We focused on children’s and adults’ ability to use contextual support to access working memory representations that might otherwise not be reported. Child...

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Veröffentlicht in:Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006) 2019-06, Vol.72 (6), p.1364-1378
Hauptverfasser: Roome, Hannah E, Towse, John N, Crespo-Llado, Maria M
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container_title Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006)
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creator Roome, Hannah E
Towse, John N
Crespo-Llado, Maria M
description Measures of working memory capacity (WMC) are extremely popular, yet we know relatively little about the specific processes that support recall. We focused on children’s and adults’ ability to use contextual support to access working memory representations that might otherwise not be reported. Children (N = 186, 5-10 years) and adults (N = 64) completed a listening span task and a delayed recall task with semantic probes or cues. Clear age-related increases in listening span were evident. All age groups benefitted from contextual support to retrieve degraded target memoranda, particularly on listening span tasks when the cues provided semantic support for processing events, in comparison to cues associated specifically with memoranda. Response latencies suggested a developing efficiency in children’s use of contextual support for delayed recall correlated with listening span performance. These probe tasks support accounts of working memory that recognise reconstructive and cued search processes.
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source MEDLINE; SAGE Complete
subjects Adult
Child
Child Development - physiology
Child, Preschool
Cues
Female
Humans
Listening
Male
Memory, Short-Term - physiology
Mental Recall - physiology
Original
Semantics
Speech Perception - physiology
title Contextual support for children’s recall within working memory
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