4,157 results on '"Memory span"'
Search Results
2. A Meta-analysis: The Efficacy of Working Memory Span (WMS) on EFL Written skill Performance
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marjan vosoughi
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working memory ,systematic review ,second language skills ,general language performance ,second language writing skills ,reading comprehension skills ,second language writing ,Language. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammar ,P101-410 ,Indo-Iranian languages and literature ,PK1-9601 - Abstract
In order to investigate the effect of Working Memory (WM) on overall L2 performance and written skills (Reading and Writing) within non-native language learning arenas, a systematic review was conducted on 22 articles extracted from three reputable, local and international scientific databases including Noormags, Science Direct and Sage between 1990 and 2021. The total number of participants in this study included 1466 involving both male and female in all age groups of children and adults. In the selection of articles with 7 different criteria, coding was applied to the extracted studies and a research protocol was precisely presented. After examining the publication bias index and preliminary assumptions, the results showed that WM has been efficient at a significance level of less than 0.05 and with a high impact factor (1.05) with a positive direction in the 95% confidence interval on diverse aspects of second language learning. Secondly, WM has also been significant at a significant level less than 0.05 and with a high impact factor on reading comprehension skills and an impact factor (0.6) with a positive direction in the 95% confidence interval but this effect on L2 writing skills was not significant (p = 0.93). The results were finally analyzed with reference to the limitations of the current systematic meta-analysis.
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- 2023
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3. Working Memory Span and Situation Model Processing
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- 2004
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4. Performance on the processing portion of complex working memory span tasks is related to working memory capacity estimates
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Richmond, Lauren L., Burnett, Lois K., Morrison, Alexandra B., and Ball, B. Hunter
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- 2022
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5. Working Memory Span: The Effect of Prior Learning
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Lustig, Cindy and Hasher, Lynn
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- 2002
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6. 3D Multiple Object Tracking or Adaptive Dual n-back Training Boosts Simple Verbal Working Memory Span but Not Multitasking Performance in Military Participants
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Vartanian, Oshin, Stokes-Hendriks, Tonya, King, Kristen, Rice, Emma, and Forbes, Sarah
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- 2021
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7. Cloud‐Enabled Mobile‐Based Approach for Enhancing Psychosis Cognitive Assessment.
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Walia, Shilpa, Kumar, Neelesh, Khosla, Praveen Kumar, and Grover, Sandeep
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SHORT-term memory , *MEMORY span , *COGNITIVE ability , *DIGITAL technology , *SCHIZOPHRENIA - Abstract
ABSTRACT Aim Methods Results Conclusion The study aims to assess the feasibility of developing cognitive tools and integrating the cloud‐enabled mobile‐based technology into routine clinical practice for psychotic patients. Furthermore, it aims to investigate the correlation between the results obtained using developed tools and established clinical measures, offering valuable insights into tools for enhancing the accuracy, efficiency and ease of administration of cognitive evaluation.A total of 160 participants were recruited (83 outpatients with early course of schizophrenia (SZs) and 77 healthy controls [HCs]). The participants were subjected to cognitive assessments, and the data were collected by cognitive assessment digital smart tool (CADST) and PGI memory scale (PGIMS) to assess attention (ATT) and working memory (WM). Outcome measures of these parameters were digit span (score,time) for ATT and delayed recall (score,time) for WM.The total average score in HCs was significantly higher than in SZs for ATT and WM, and CADST was significantly correlated with PGIMS for evaluating ATT and WM. Furthermore, test completion times for ATT and WM were observed more in SZs although most of SZs had achieved scores as high as that of HCs.The potential of CADST as a valuable addition to the conventional cognitive assessment method is highlighted, showing promising feasibility and strong correlations with the established tool. The importance of integrating time parameters suggests broader implications for understanding cognitive function beyond conventional scoring metrics. It demonstrates the effective and accurate approach for large‐scale screening of cognitive parameters in public service settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Aging Processes of Working Memory in Different Modalities.
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Levi, Ohad and Heled, Eyal
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MEMORY span , *AGE groups , *SHORT-term memory , *TASK performance , *OLDER people - Abstract
Background: Working memory (WM) involves temporarily storing and manipulating information. Research on the impact of aging on WM has shown inconsistent results regarding the decline in visual and verbal WM, with a lack of studies on tactile WM. This study aimed to assess the effects of aging on WM across verbal, visuospatial, and tactile modalities using span tasks of forward (storage) and backward (manipulation) stages. Methods: A total of 130 participants, divided into four age groups of 20–29, 60–69, 70–79, and 80–89, completed the Digit, Visuospatial, and Tactual Spans. Performance was analyzed using a 3 (Task) × 4 (Group) × 2 (Stage) mixed design repeated measures ANOVA. Results: The analysis revealed significant main effects for modality (p < 0.001, ηp2 = 0.15), age (p < 0.001, ηp2 = 0.48), and stage (p < 0.001, ηp2 = 0.30). Digit Span outperformed the other modalities, while Tactual Span showed the worst performance. Additionally, task performance declined with age, and the forward stage was superior to the backward stage. Interaction effects indicated that Digit Span was less affected by aging compared to the Visuospatial and Tactual Spans (p = 0.004, ηp2 = 0.07). Post hoc analyses further revealed that the Digit Span consistently outperformed the other modalities in both stages, with more pronounced differences observed in the forward stage. Conclusions: Verbal WM is more resilient to aging compared to the other modalities while tactile WM declines with age in a manner similar to verbal and visuospatial WM, suggesting a modality-specific impact of aging on WM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Receptive vocabulary, memory span, and speech articulation in Pakistani children with developmental language disorders.
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Hafeez, Huma, Yasmin, Tahira, Raza, Muhammad Hashim, Mubarak, Lubna, Ashraf, Komal, Samra, Malka M., and Basra, Muhammad Asim Raza
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LANGUAGE disorders , *PAKISTANIS , *MEMORY span , *CHILDREN'S language , *ARTICULATION (Speech) , *CHILDREN with developmental disabilities , *DEAF children , *VOWELS - Abstract
This study aimed to find the association of receptive vocabulary in the development of speech and language among school-going children (4–13 years) with language disorders. On the basis of non-verbal receptive vocabulary and percentage correct consonants (PCC) scores, children from public schools in Punjab, Pakistan with speech and language issues were separated into three groups; Speech sound disordered (SSD, N = 15), Language Impaired (LI) comorbid with SSD (N = 42) and typically developed (TD, N = 15). Urdu version of Peabody picture vocabulary test, fourth edition (U-PPVT-4), Digit memory test (DMT), and Test for assessment of articulation and phonology in Urdu (TAAPU) were used to assess non-verbal receptive vocabulary, Short-term memory (STM), Working memory (WM), and SSD. Correlation and regression analyses were performed to find the association of receptive vocabulary with other measures used. Receptive vocabulary, STM, WM, omission, substitution, and PCC scores were significantly different (p < 0.01) when compared among LI+SSD, SSD, and TD groups. Regression analysis showed that receptive vocabulary was significantly associated with STM and WM in the LI+SSD group. A positive correlation was found between the U-PPVT-4 standard score with STM and WM for LI+SSD and SSD groups. Our findings in Urdu-speaking children suggested that STM and WM were less developed in children with speech and language impairments. Moreover, children with speech and language deficits not only had weaker receptive vocabulary but also attention should be given to improving STM and WM that contribute to LI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Working memory span and receptive vocabulary assessment in Urdu speaking children with speech sound disorder
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Tahira Yasmin, Huma Hafeez, Aatika Sadia, Mubarak Lubna, Sharmeen Aslam Tarar, Muhammad Hashim Raza, and Muhammad Asim Raza Basra
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Speech sound disorder ,Working memory ,Short-term memory ,Urdu speaking ,Percentage correct consonants ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Emerging evidence suggests that impaired speech may be related to reduced working memory (WM). The current study aimed to validate and compare the influence of articulation, short-term memory (STM), WM, and receptive vocabulary abilities of Pakistani children with speech sound disorder (SSD; N = 50) versus typically developing (TD; N = 30) children aged 7–13 years. Assessments included the Test for Assessment of Articulation and Phonology in Urdu (TAAPU), Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-4, translated to Urdu (U-PPVT-4), and Digit Memory Test (DMT) used to determine speech articulation, receptive vocabulary, and memory abilities respectively. The percentage correct consonants (PCC) score was used to divide the SSD group further into SSD severity groups. The TD and SSD groups significantly differed in performance on all tasks (p
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- 2022
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11. Path Configuration Complexity Affects Spatial Memory Span on the eCorsi Task but Does Not Influence Performance of a Concurrent Auditory Discrimination Task
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Anthony Tapper and Ewa Niechwiej-Szwedo
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divided attention ,working memory ,Corsi ,spatial memory ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Visuospatial working memory is often assessed using the Corsi block-tapping task where set size is used to estimate capacity. It is well established that characteristics of the Corsi task path configuration such as length, crossings, and angles influence recall accuracy suggesting that more complex path configurations increase the load on working memory. However, the interaction between set size and path configuration is not well understood. Here we used a secondary auditory task to probe if set size and path configuration impose a similar type of load on the system. Nineteen participants (age = 25.3 ± 3.9 years) performed a computerized version of the Corsi test either alone (single) or simultaneously with an auditory tone discrimination task (dual). The eCorsi task involved a set of simple (no crosses, shorter lengths, larger angles) or complex (>2 crosses, longer lengths, smaller angles) paths at set sizes of five to eight blocks. Results showed significantly lower recall accuracy for the complex compared to the simple paths (63.32% vs. 86.38%, p < 0.001) at all set sizes, regardless of task condition (single, dual). Auditory performance (accuracy and response time) was significantly lower in the dual compared to single task (85.34% vs. 99.67%, p < 0.001), but performance was not affected by the complexity of the eCorsi path configuration. These findings suggest that set size and path complexity impose a different type of load on the working memory system and may rely on different resources.
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- 2023
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12. Recognition memory span in autopsy-confirmed Dementia with Lewy Bodies and Alzheimer's Disease
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Salmon, David P, Heindel, William C, Hamilton, Joanne M, Filoteo, J Vincent, Cidambi, Varun, Hansen, Lawrence A, Masliah, Eliezer, and Galasko, Douglas
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Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) ,Dementia ,Lewy Body Dementia ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Neurodegenerative ,Clinical Research ,Alzheimer's Disease ,Aging ,Brain Disorders ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Neurological ,Aged ,Alzheimer Disease ,Brain ,Facial Recognition ,Humans ,Lewy Body Disease ,Memory ,Short-Term ,Mental Recall ,Mental Status Schedule ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Recognition ,Psychology ,Space Perception ,Speech Perception ,Working memory ,Secondary memory ,Cognition ,Dementia with Lewy Bodies ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Evidence from patients with amnesia suggests that recognition memory span tasks engage both long-term memory (i.e., secondary memory) processes mediated by the diencephalic-medial temporal lobe memory system and working memory processes mediated by fronto-striatal systems. Thus, the recognition memory span task may be particularly effective for detecting memory deficits in disorders that disrupt both memory systems. The presence of unique pathology in fronto-striatal circuits in Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) compared to AD suggests that performance on the recognition memory span task might be differentially affected in the two disorders even though they have quantitatively similar deficits in secondary memory. In the present study, patients with autopsy-confirmed DLB or AD, and Normal Control (NC) participants, were tested on separate recognition memory span tasks that required them to retain increasing amounts of verbal, spatial, or visual object (i.e., faces) information across trials. Results showed that recognition memory spans for verbal and spatial stimuli, but not face stimuli, were lower in patients with DLB than in those with AD, and more impaired relative to NC performance. This was despite similar deficits in the two patient groups on independent measures of secondary memory such as the total number of words recalled from long-term storage on the Buschke Selective Reminding Test. The disproportionate vulnerability of recognition memory span task performance in DLB compared to AD may be due to greater fronto-striatal involvement in DLB and a corresponding decrement in cooperative interaction between working memory and secondary memory processes. Assessment of recognition memory span may contribute to the ability to distinguish between DLB and AD relatively early in the course of disease.
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- 2015
13. The Digit Span Test: Normative Data for the Iranian Normal Population.
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Sisakhti, Minoo, Hossein Batouli, Seyed Amir, Delazar, Elaheh, and Farrahi, Hassan
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MEMORY span , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *CONVENIENCE sampling (Statistics) , *ATTENTION testing , *IRANIANS - Abstract
Background: The digit span test (DST) is one of the most widely used neuropsychological tools to measure two neurocognitive functions of working memory and attention. Objectives: This study aimed to collect Iranian normative data on DST and examine the association between three demographic variables and performance in DST. Materials & Methods: As part of the Iranian brain imaging database (IBID) project, the present study was conducted in 2017-2018 on three hundred normal people aged 20 to 70. They were recruited using convenience sampling in Tehran City, Iran. Each decade consisted of 60 participants, and the gender proportion was equal. Five decades of age, gender and education were the independent variables. The dependent variables were DST scores (the longest digit sequence and total digit span). Results: Age and education had a significant negative and positive correlation with both subtests (P=0.01), respectively; however, no significant correlation was observed between gender and DST scores (P>0.05). According to multivariate analysis of variance, the interaction of age, gender and education did not lead to a significant difference in the DST scores (P=0.309). In addition, The Tukey post hoc test showed that participants under 40 had significantly higher DST scores than older participants (P<0.05). Conclusion: The demographic variables have a significant association with the working memory and attention performance of the normal Iranian population, and it is necessary to interpret DST scores using regional normative data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Effects of working memory and task type on syntactic complexity in EFL learners’ writing.
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Jiang, Lei, Abbuhl, Rebekha, and Fu, Yv
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NATURAL language processing , *MEMORY span , *SHORT-term memory , *ENGLISH as a foreign language , *CHINESE-speaking students , *LISTENING comprehension , *ADULT students - Abstract
This study investigated the predictive power of working memory and task type for syntactic complexity in EFL adult learners’ academic writing. One hundred forty-eight Chinese adult students were recruited as participants. Their working memory was assessed with an operation span task, a set of digit span tasks, and a symmetry span task. The syntactic complexity of their written products from two different TOEFL iBT writing tasks, an integrated writing task and an independent writing task, was measured using a natural language processing tool. Results showed a significant positive association between operation span and coordination in the students’ written products. In addition, a significant difference was found between the integrated task and the independent task with respect to phrasal complexity, with the integrated task eliciting more complex nominals per clause than the independent task. No significant effects were identified for other components of working memory or other measures of syntactic complexity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Does Growth in Working Memory Span or Executive Processes Predict Growth in Reading and Math in Children With Reading Disabilities?
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Jerman, Olga, Reynolds, Chandra, and Swanson, H. Lee
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- 2012
16. Persistent Difference in Short-Term Memory Span between Sign and Speech: Implications for Cross-Linguistic Comparisons
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Bavelier, Daphne, Newport, Elissa L., Hall, Matthew L., Supalla, Ted, and Boutla, Mrim
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- 2006
17. Dopamine D2 agonist affects visuospatial working memory distractor interference depending on individual differences in baseline working memory span
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Broadway, James M., Frank, Michael J., and Cavanagh, James F.
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- 2018
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18. Executive functions in patients with bilateral and unilateral peripheral vestibular dysfunction.
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Schöne, Corina G., Vibert, Dominique, and Mast, Fred W.
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EXECUTIVE function ,VESTIBULAR apparatus diseases ,PSYCHOEDUCATION ,MEMORY span ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,COGNITIVE training - Abstract
Previous research suggests that patients with peripheral vestibular dysfunction (PVD) suffer from nonspatial cognitive problems, including executive impairments. However, previous studies that assessed executive functions are conflicting, limited to single executive components, and assessments are confounded by other cognitive functions. We compared performance in a comprehensive executive test battery in a large sample of 83 patients with several conditions of PVD (34 bilateral, 29 chronic unilateral, 20 acute unilateral) to healthy controls who were pairwise matched to patients regarding age, sex, and education. We assessed basic and complex executive functions with validated neuropsychological tests. Patients with bilateral PVD performed worse than controls in verbal initiation and working memory span, while other executive functions were preserved. Patients with chronic unilateral PVD had equal executive performance as controls. Patients with acute unilateral PVD performed worse than controls in the exact same tests as patients with bilateral PVD (verbal initiation, working memory span); however, this effect in patients with acute PVD diminished after correcting for multiple comparisons. Hearing loss and affective disorders did not influence our results. Vestibular related variables (disease duration, symptoms, dizziness handicap, deafferentation degree, and compensation) did not predict verbal initiation or working memory span in patients with bilateral PVD. The results suggest that bilateral PVD not only manifests in difficulties when solving spatial tasks but leads to more general neurocognitive deficits. This understanding is important for multidisciplinary workgroups (e.g., neurotologists, neurologists, audiologists) that are involved in diagnosing and treating patients with PVD. We recommend screening patients with PVD for executive impairments and if indicated providing them with cognitive training or psychoeducational support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Verbal Short-Term Memory Span in Speech-Disordered Children: Implications for Articulatory Coding in Short-Term Memory
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Raine, Adrian, Hulme, Charles, Chadderton, Helen, and Bailey, Pauline
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- 1991
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20. Video Game Skills across Diverse Genres and Cognitive Functioning in Early Adulthood: Verbal and Visuospatial Short-Term and Working Memory, Hand–Eye Coordination, and Empathy.
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Zioga, Triantafyllia, Ferentinos, Aristotelis, Konsolaki, Eleni, Nega, Chrysanthi, and Kourtesis, Panagiotis
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COGNITIVE processing speed ,COGNITIVE ability ,SHORT-term memory ,MEMORY span ,VIDEO games - Abstract
The cognitive and affective impacts of video games are subjects of ongoing debate, with recent research recognizing their potential benefits. This study employs the Gaming Skill Questionnaire (GSQ) to evaluate participants' gaming skills across six genres and overall proficiency. A total of 88 individuals aged 20–40 participated, completing assessments of empathy and six cognitive abilities: verbal short-term memory, verbal working memory, visuospatial short-term memory, visuospatial working memory, psychomotor speed (hand–eye coordination), and attention. Participants' cognitive abilities were examined using the Digit Span Test, Corsi Block Test, and Deary–Liewald Reaction Time Task, while empathy was assessed using the Empathy Quotient Questionnaire. Findings indicate that higher levels of videogaming proficiency are linked to improvements in visuospatial short-term and working memory, psychomotor speed, and attention. Specific genres enhanced particular skills: RPGs were positively associated with both verbal working memory and visuospatial short-term memory, but were negatively associated with empathy; action games improved psychomotor speed and attention; and puzzle games showed a positive relationship with visuospatial working memory. These results add to ongoing research on the cognitive and affective effects of video games, suggesting their potential to enhance specific cognitive functions. They also highlight the complex relationship between video games and empathy. Future research should explore the long-term impacts and genre-specific effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. The effect of computerized cognitive training and transcranial direct current stimulation on working memory among post-stroke individuals: a systematic review with meta-analysis and meta-regression.
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Kazinczi, Csaba, Kocsis, Krisztián, Boross, Katalin, Racsmány, Mihály, Klivényi, Péter, Vécsei, László, and Must, Anita
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TRANSCRANIAL direct current stimulation ,COGNITIVE training ,MEMORY span ,SHORT-term memory ,COMPUTER assisted instruction - Abstract
Background: Working memory (WM) impairment is a common phenomenon after stroke; however, its management in rehabilitation is less researched. This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to provide a quantitative synthesis of the impact of computerised cognitive training (CCT) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on WM span in post-stroke individuals. Methods: The literature search in PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Cochrane Library focused on randomized controlled trials testing the effect of CCT and tDCS on treated stroke patients as compared to untreated controls. Neuropsychological instruments such as Digit Span Forward/Backward and Visual Span Forward Tests defined the outcome of WM span. After extracting study characteristics and quality assessment using the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool, we conducted a meta-analysis and meta-regression using standardised mean differences. Results: The search yielded 4142 articles, nine of which (N = 461) fulfilled the inclusion criteria. In the case of CCT, we found significant improvement in Digit Span Backward Test (Z = 2.65, P = 0.008; 95% CI [0.10, 0.67]) and Visual Span Forward Test performance (Z = 3.05, P = 0.002; 95% CI [0.15, 0.69]), while for tDCS, we could not find a sufficient number of studies for the analysis. Furthermore, no significant moderating factor was found in the meta-regression. Conclusions: In conclusion, CCT appears to be a suitable choice to enhance WM span performance after stroke. However, further research is needed to investigate the effect of tDCS due to the limited number of studies. Trial registration: The meta-analysis was conducted according to PRISMA (Preferred Reporting of Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) standards with a PROSPERO registration protocol (ID: CRD42023387182). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. The Effect of Working Memory Rehabilitation on Visual Memory and Memory Span
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mansour Mahmoudi Aghdam, Esmaeil Soleymani, and Ali Issa Zadegan
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cognition ,Rehabilitation ,Working memory ,medicine.medical_treatment ,lcsh:Geriatrics ,rehabilitation ,memory span ,aged ,lcsh:RC952-954.6 ,Visual memory ,Memory span ,medicine ,visual memory ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Introduction: Age-related cognitive decline or cognitive aging is largely the result of structural and functional decline in specific areas of the brain, but lifestyle also contributes to this cognitive decline. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of working memory rehabilitation on visual memory and memory span in ageing. Methods: This was a quasi-experimental study with pretest-posttest design and a control group. The study population included all elderly people who lived in Bukan Nursing Home from April to July 2019 (N = 120). Among these individuals, 30 elderly people were selected by convenience sampling method and then randomly assigned to two experimental and control groups (two groups of 15 people). Kim Karad Visual Memory Test and Wechsler Memory Span Test were taken from the groups in pretest. The working memory rehabilitation was performed in 18 sessions (each sessions 60-minute) and after which the test was performed again. The data were analyzed by multivariate covariance test according to its assumptions. Results: The results showed that after the rehabilitation of working memory, in the experimental group, the mean of short, medium and long components of visual memory were 12.00, 10.8 and 12.33, respectively, and the direct and inverse of memory span were 11.66 and 9.66, respectively. In the control group, the average of short, medium and long components of visual memory is 7.00, 6.70 and 9.00, respectively, and direct and inverse of memory span is 8.33 and 6.46, respectively. The difference in the mean scores between the two groups in the components of visual memory and memory span after the intervention was significant (p < 0.001). Conclusion: The results showed that working memory rehabilitation can improve visual memory and memory span, and it is recommended that this rehabilitation method be used to improve the cognitive functions of the elderly.
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- 2020
23. A working memory span task for toddlers
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Laura Prandelli, Sergio Morra, Sabrina Panesi, and Elena Gandolfi
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Span (category theory) ,Working memory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Sorting ,Affect (psychology) ,Memory load ,050105 experimental psychology ,Task (project management) ,Memory, Short-Term ,Child, Preschool ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Memory span ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Imitation ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
This study presents a new working memory measure for toddlers, inspired by the Spin-the-Pots (Hughes & Ensor, 2005), which we modified structuring it as a memory span task. As in the original task, we required toddlers to retrieve objects hidden in little boxes; however, in our Memory Span Spin-the-Pots (MSSP) we used smaller numbers of targets, and we systematically manipulated memory load, covering or not the display, and rotating it or not. Two experiments involved participants between 18 months and three years. In Experiment 1 we examined the effects of covering and rotation on toddlers' memory. Either covering or rotating the stimuli hindered their performance, and combining both transformations yielded an under-additive interaction. Moreover, the effect of covering decreased in the second half of the procedure. In Experiment 2 we validated the MSSP as a working memory measure by comparing it with the Imitation Sorting Task (IST; Alp, 1994). We found that the MSSP correlated with the IST, also with age partialled out, although the IST was easier. In both experiments, the scores increased with age. Overall, this research sheds light on some variables that affect toddlers' performance on the MSSP, and shows that it can be used as a valid working memory measure for toddlers. The results are discussed considering the attentional processes presumably involved.
- Published
- 2021
24. Phonological similarity in working memory span tasks
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Chow, Michael, Macnamara, Brooke N., and Conway, Andrew R. A.
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- 2016
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25. Central Auditory Processing Abilities in Children with Non-Syndromic Cleft Lip/and Palate-a Behavioural Study.
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B., Dhivagar and Jain, Chandni
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AUDITORY perception ,CLEFT lip ,CLEFT palate ,MEMORY span ,SHORT-term memory - Abstract
The present study aimed to assess the central auditory processing abilities and working memory in children with non-syndromic cleft lip and palate (NSCLP) and to compare with the developed normative and craniofacially normal peers. Sixteen NSCLP children aged 7 to 12 years and fifteen craniofacially normal peers were recruited in this study. Speech perception in noise Kannada (SPIN-K), gap detection threshold (GDT), dichotic consonant-vowel (DCV), and masking level difference (MLD) tests were administered to assess various central auditory processing abilities. Working memory abilities were assessed by using forward-digit span and backward-digit span tests. The results showed significant differences in SPIN-K, dichotic CV, GDT, forward digit, and backward digit span scores between children with NSCLP and craniofacially normal peers. Thus, it can be concluded from the present study that children with NSCLP have a risk of developing auditory processing deficits. To conclude, assessment of central auditory processing abilities in children with NSCLP is recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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26. Facilitation of working memory capacity by transcranial direct current stimulation: a secondary analysis from the augmenting cognitive training in older adults (ACT) study.
- Author
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Aksu, Serkan, Indahlastari, Aprinda, O'Shea, Andrew, Marsiske, Michael, Cohen, Ronald, Alexander, Gene E., DeKosky, Steven T., Hishaw, Georg A., Dai, Yunfeng, Wu, Samuel S., and Woods, Adam J.
- Subjects
TRANSCRANIAL direct current stimulation ,MEMORY span ,COGNITIVE training ,COGNITIVE aging ,OLDER people - Abstract
Aging is a public health concern with an ever-increasing magnitude worldwide. An array of neuroscience-based approaches like transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and cognitive training have garnered attention in the last decades to ameliorate the effects of cognitive aging in older adults. This study evaluated the effects of 3 months of bilateral tDCS over the frontal cortices with multimodal cognitive training on working memory capacity. Two hundred ninety-two older adults without dementia were allocated to active or sham tDCS paired with cognitive training. These participants received repeated sessions of bilateral tDCS over the bilateral frontal cortices, combined with multimodal cognitive training. Working memory capacity was assessed with the digit span forward, backward, and sequencing tests. No baseline differences between active and sham groups were observed. Multiple linear regressions indicated more improvement of the longest digit span backward from baseline to post-intervention (p = 0.021) and a trend towards greater improvement (p = 0.056) of the longest digit span backward from baseline to 1 year in the active tDCS group. No significant between-group changes were observed for digit span forward or digit span sequencing. The present results provide evidence for the potential for tDCS paired with cognitive training to remediate age-related declines in working memory capacity. These findings are sourced from secondary outcomes in a large randomized clinical trial and thus deserve future targeted investigation in older adult populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Eight brain structures mediate the age-related alterations of the working memory: forward and backward digit span tasks.
- Author
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Bahri, Maryam, Farrahi, Hassan, Mahdavinataj, Hami, and Hossein Batouli, Seyed Amir
- Subjects
EXECUTIVE function ,DEFAULT mode network ,TEMPORAL lobe ,MEMORY span ,LARGE-scale brain networks - Abstract
Introduction: Working memory (WM) as one of the executive functions is an essential neurocognitive ability for daily life. Findings have suggested that aging is often associated with working memory and neural decline, but the brain structures and resting-state brain networks that mediate age-related differences in WM remain unclear. Methods: A sample consisting of 252 healthy participants in the age range of 20 to 70years was used. Several cognitive tasks, including the n-back task and the forward and backward digit span tests were used. Also, resting-state functional imaging, as well as structural imaging using a 3T MRI scanner, were performed, resulting in 85 gray matter volumes and five resting-state networks, namely the anterior and posterior default mode, the right and left executive control, and the salience networks. Also, mediation analyses were used to investigate the role of gray matter volumes and resting-state networks in the relationship between age and WM. Results: Behaviorally, aging was associated with decreased performance in the digit span task. Also, aging was associated with a decreased gray matter volume in 80 brain regions, and with a decreased activity in the anterior default mode network, executive control, and salience networks. Importantly, the path analysis showed that the GMV of the medial orbitofrontal, precentral, parieto-occipital, amygdala, middle occipital, posterior cingulate, and thalamus areas mediated the age-related differences in the forward digit span task, and the GMV of superior temporal gyrus mediated the age-related differences in the backward digit span task. Discussion: This study identified the brain structures mediating the relationship between age and working memory, and we hope that our research provides an opportunity for early detection of individuals at risk of age-related memory decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Study of Speech Recognition in Noise and Working Memory in Adults and Elderly with Normal Hearing.
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Akashi, Daniela Aiko and Martinelli, Maria Cecília
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SPEECH perception ,SHORT-term memory ,RECOGNITION (Psychology) ,MEMORY span ,OLDER people ,HEARING levels ,HEARING - Abstract
Introduction In clinical practice, patients with the same degree and configuration of hearing loss, or even with normal audiometric thresholds, present substantially different performances in terms of speech perception. This probably happens because other factors, in addition to auditory sensitivity, interfere with speech perception. Thus, studies are needed to investigate the performance of listeners in unfavorable listening conditions to identify the processes that interfere in the speech perception of these subjects. Objective To verify the influence of age, temporal processing, and working memory on speech recognition in noise. Methods Thirty-eight adult and elderly individuals with normal hearing thresholds participated in the study. Participants were divided into two groups: The adult group (G1), composed of 10 individuals aged 21 to 33 years, and the elderly group (G2), with 28 participants aged 60 to 81 years. They underwent audiological assessment with the Portuguese Sentence List Test, Gaps-in-Noise test, Digit Span Memory test, Running Span Task, Corsi Block-Tapping test, and Visual Pattern test. Results The Running Span Task score proved to be a statistically significant predictor of the listening-in-noise variable. This result showed that the difference in performance between groups G1 and G2 in relation to listening in noise is due not only to aging, but also to changes in working memory. Conclusion The study showed that working memory is a predictor of listening performance in noise in individuals with normal hearing, and that this task can provide important information for investigation in individuals who have difficulty hearing in unfavorable environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. The Role of Working Memory and Short-Term Memory in Sentence Comprehension: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis in Probable Alzheimer's Disease.
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Gilardone, Giulia, Longo, Chiara, and Papagno, Costanza
- Subjects
ALZHEIMER'S disease ,SHORT-term memory ,MEMORY span ,SPECIFIC language impairment in children ,READING comprehension ,STANDARDIZED tests ,APOLIPOPROTEIN E4 ,ENGLISH language - Abstract
The role of either short-term memory (STM) or working memory (WM) in sentence comprehension is a matter of debate. Although it is commonly accepted that memory resources are necessary for sentence comprehension, there is no agreement regarding the nature of their role. The aim of this review is to investigate and synthesize assessment tools and correlation data between STM or WM and sentence comprehension in probable Alzheimer's disease (AD). To this aim, a systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature was conducted according to the PRISMA guidelines. PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, PsycInfo, and LLBA databases were searched. Two independent authors selected peer-reviewed articles published in English and focused on the relationship between STM or WM and sentence comprehension in probable AD. A total of 11 case–control studies were included at the end of the selection process. Most studies adopted offline tasks to evaluate sentence comprehension, while a small number of authors applied online experimental tasks. The digit span forward and backward were the most employed standardized tests to evaluate phonological STM and WM, respectively. The meta-analysis results supported the association between performance on STM and WM and comprehension tasks. However, moderate heterogeneity was found, mainly due to the small number of included studies, especially for STM, and the substantial variability of the adopted tasks. Therefore, in order to clarify the specific source of language comprehension deficits, new and sophisticated experiments should be conducted using adequate material. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Unilateral auditory deprivation in humans: Effects on frequency discrimination and auditory memory span in the normal ear
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Srikanta K. Mishra and Ratul Dey
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Echoic memory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Audiology ,Hearing Loss, Unilateral ,Pitch Discrimination ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tone (musical instrument) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hearing ,Perception ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Memory span ,Humans ,Auditory deprivation ,Association (psychology) ,media_common ,Working memory ,business.industry ,Hearing Tests ,medicine.disease ,Sensory Systems ,030104 developmental biology ,Memory, Short-Term ,Unilateral hearing loss ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Hearing with one ear is associated with auditory deprivation leading to cortical neuronal reorganization. Despite evidence for substantial effects of unilateral input on cortical and sub-cortical structures, the functional consequences of such alterations on human hearing is underexplored. Unilateral hearing impairment offers a unique model to study the perceptual consequences of cortical reorganization. The present study provides evidence for larger (poorer) difference limens for frequency for sounds heard by the normal ear of listeners with unilateral hearing loss relative to bilaterally normal-hearing controls. This difference in frequency discrimination ability was observed for the low (250 Hz), but not for the high-frequency tone (4000 Hz). Besides auditory perceptual effects, we also found reduced working memory capacity as revealed by forward and backward digit span measures. Contrary to the expectation, there was no significant association between frequency discrimination and working memory capacity in listeners with unilateral hearing loss. Auditory deprivation associated with unilateral hearing impairment affects low-frequency (pitch) discrimination and working memory capacity despite normal hearing in the intact ear. Such deficits in basic auditory processes and memory span for sounds heard by the normal ear may contribute to the hearing and communication difficulties experienced by listeners with unilateral or single-sided deafness.
- Published
- 2020
31. High-current galvanic vestibular stimulation impairs working memory span, but not other executive functions.
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Schöne, Corina G. and Mast, Fred W.
- Subjects
- *
EXECUTIVE function , *VESTIBULAR stimulation , *MEMORY span , *SHORT-term memory , *COGNITIVE flexibility , *VESTIBULAR nerve , *VESTIBULAR apparatus , *MEMORY testing - Abstract
Patients with peripheral vestibular dysfunction (PVD) suffer not only from physical problems such as imbalance or vertigo but also from neuropsychological difficulties, including executive deficits. However, it is unclear whether the PVD directly causes executive problems. To examine the causal vestibular influence on executive functions, we induced either high-current (2 mA), low-current (0.8 mA), or sham current (0 mA) galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) in 79 healthy participants. Participants solved three tasks, measuring the core executive components (working memory, inhibition, cognitive flexibility) before and during GVS. High-current GVS impaired working memory span, but not inhibition and cognitive flexibility performance. Low-current GVS did not influence executive performance. Results indicate a causal vestibular influence on working memory span. Joint cortical areas of vestibular and working memory processing are discussed. Since high-current GVS in healthy participants serves as a model for an artificial vestibular dysfunction, our results could improve the diagnostics and therapy of patients with PVD. • Galvanic vestibular stimulation impairs working memory span in healthy participants. • Galvanic vestibular stimulation does not impair inhibition. • Galvanic vestibular stimulation does not impair cognitive flexibility. • Low-current galvanic vestibular stimulation does not improve executive performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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32. Efficacy of Cognitive Training in Older Adults with and without Subjective Cognitive Decline Is Associated with Inhibition Efficiency and Working Memory Span, Not with Cognitive Reserve
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Ramón López-Higes, María T. Martín-Aragoneses, Susana Rubio-Valdehita, María L. Delgado-Losada, Pedro Montejo, Mercedes Montenegro, José M. Prados, Jaisalmer de Frutos-Lucas, and David López-Sanz
- Subjects
cognitive reserve ,executive functions ,working memory ,cognitive training ,efficacy ,cognitive status ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The present study explores the role of cognitive reserve, executive functions, and working memory (WM) span, as factors that might explain training outcomes in cognitive status. Eighty-one older adults voluntarily participated in the study, classified either as older adults with subjective cognitive decline or cognitively intact. Each participant underwent a neuropsychological assessment that was conducted both at baseline (entailing cognitive reserve, executive functions, WM span and depressive symptomatology measures, as well as the Mini-Mental State Exam regarding initial cognitive status), and then 6 months later, once each participant had completed the training program (Mini-Mental State Exam at the endpoint). With respect to cognitive status the training program was most beneficial for subjective cognitive decline participants with low efficiency in inhibition at baseline (explaining a 33% of Mini-Mental State Exam total variance), whereas for cognitively intact participants training gains were observed for those who presented lower WM span.
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- 2018
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33. The classical backward digit span task detects changes in working memory but is unsuitable for classifying the severity of dementia.
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Yoshimura, Takako, Osaka, Mariko, Osawa, Aiko, and Maeshima, Shinichiro
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- *
MEMORY span , *SHORT-term memory , *DEMENTIA , *JAPANESE people , *OLDER people - Abstract
Dementia is characterized by the deterioration of working memory (WM). The backward digit span (DS) task and reading span test (RST) are measures of WM. DS task and RST have not been directly compared in assessing dementia. This study aimed to compare the performance of individuals with dementia in forward and backward DS tasks to that in RST. We investigated the ability of forward/backward DS tasks to discriminate dementia severity. Forward/backward DS tasks and RST were performed in 15 elderly Japanese individuals with dementia. Twenty-six and 20 elderly individuals for the DS task and RST, respectively, were included as controls. Clinical Dementia Rating scale (CDR) was used to evaluate dementia severity. DS task scores were significantly correlated with RST scores. Both types of DS tasks correlated with RST, only the RST distinguished dementia severity based on CDR. Our findings indicate that the backward DS task may detect WM decline in dementia, but the RST is more suitable for assessing dementia severity. The backward DS task may be an effective screening measure for dementia signs in the elderly and may be used to identify patients requiring further assessments such as the RST to evaluate dementia severity based on WM performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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34. Visual working memory span in adults with cochlear implants: Some preliminary findings
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Aaron C. Moberly, David B. Pisoni, and Michael S. Harris
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Speech perception ,RD1-811 ,Hearing loss ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Digit span ,Audiology ,Span (engineering) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Perception ,medicine ,Memory span ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,media_common ,Working memory ,business.industry ,Cognition ,Verbal working memory ,Sensorineural hearing loss ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 ,Cochlear implants ,Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neurocognitive ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Research Paper - Abstract
Objective: Neurocognitive functions, specifically verbal working memory (WM), contribute to speech recognition in postlingual adults with cochlear implants (CIs) and normal-hearing (NH) listener shearing degraded speech. Three hypotheses were tested: (1) WM accuracy as assessed using three visual span measures — digits, objects, and symbols — would correlate with recognition scores for spectrally degraded speech (through a CI or when noise-vocoded); (2) WM accuracy would be best for digit span, intermediate for object span, and lowest for symbol span, due to the increasing cognitive demands across these tasks. Like-wise, response times, relating to processing demands, would be shortest for digit span, intermediate for object span, and longest for symbol span; (3) CI users would demonstrate poorer and slower performance than NH peers on WM tasks, as a result of less efficient verbally mediated encoding strategies associated with a period of prolonged auditory deprivation. Methods: Cross-sectional study of 30 postlingually deaf adults with CIs and 34 NH controls. Participants were tested for sentence recognition in quiet (CI users) or after noise-vocoding (NH peers), along with WM using visual measures of digit span, object span, and symbol span. Results: Of the three measures of WM, digit span scores alone correlated with sentence recognition for CI users; no correlations were found using these three measures for NH peers. As predicted, WM accuracy (and response times) were best (and fastest) for digit span, intermediate for object span, and worst (and slowest) for symbol span. CI users and NH peers demonstrated equivalent WM accuracy and response time for digit span and object span, and similar response times for symbol span, but contrary to our original predictions, CI users demonstrated better accuracy on symbol span than NH peers. Conclusions: Verbal WM assessed using visual tasks relates weakly to sentence recognition for degraded speech. CI users performed equivalently to NH peers on most visual tasks of WM, but they outperformed NH peers on symbol span accuracy. This finding deserves further exploration but may suggest that CI users develop alternative or compensatory strategies associated with rapid verbal coding, as a result of their prolonged experience of auditory deprivation. Key words: Cochlear implants; Sensorineural hearing loss; Speech perception; Verbal working memory; Digit span
- Published
- 2017
35. The Hebb repetition effect in simple and complex memory span
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Oberauer, Klaus, Jones, Timothy, and Lewandowsky, Stephan
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- 2015
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36. Recognition memory span in autopsy-confirmed Dementia with Lewy Bodies and Alzheimer's Disease.
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Salmon, David P., Heindel, William C., Hamilton, Joanne M., Vincent Filoteo, J., Cidambi, Varun, Hansen, Lawrence A., Masliah, Eliezer, and Galasko, Douglas
- Subjects
- *
LEWY body dementia , *MEMORY span , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *RECOGNITION (Psychology) , *AMNESIA , *LONG-term memory - Abstract
Evidence from patients with amnesia suggests that recognition memory span tasks engage both long-term memory (i.e., secondary memory) processes mediated by the diencephalic-medial temporal lobe memory system and working memory processes mediated by fronto-striatal systems. Thus, the recognition memory span task may be particularly effective for detecting memory deficits in disorders that disrupt both memory systems. The presence of unique pathology in fronto-striatal circuits in Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) compared to AD suggests that performance on the recognition memory span task might be differentially affected in the two disorders even though they have quantitatively similar deficits in secondary memory. In the present study, patients with autopsy-confirmed DLB or AD, and Normal Control (NC) participants, were tested on separate recognition memory span tasks that required them to retain increasing amounts of verbal, spatial, or visual object (i.e., faces) information across trials. Results showed that recognition memory spans for verbal and spatial stimuli, but not face stimuli, were lower in patients with DLB than in those with AD, and more impaired relative to NC performance. This was despite similar deficits in the two patient groups on independent measures of secondary memory such as the total number of words recalled from long-term storage on the Buschke Selective Reminding Test. The disproportionate vulnerability of recognition memory span task performance in DLB compared to AD may be due to greater fronto-striatal involvement in DLB and a corresponding decrement in cooperative interaction between working memory and secondary memory processes. Assessment of recognition memory span may contribute to the ability to distinguish between DLB and AD relatively early in the course of disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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37. Investigating the Independence of Memory Span and Updating in Working Memory
- Author
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Frischkorn, Gidon, Schubert, Anna-Lena, Thiel, Josephine, Göttmann, Jan, Hänel, Lara, and Hagemann, Dirk
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Cognitive Psychology ,Decay ,Working Memory ,Interference ,Processing Speed ,Updating - Abstract
This projects aims to investigating the interrelations between memory span and updating in working memory. It contains the code for the experiment as well as R scripts for data preparation and analysis. A summary of the results will be added later on.
- Published
- 2022
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38. Exploring bilateral field advantage across lifespan with a visual working memory span task
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Slana Ozimič, Anka and Repovš, Grega
- Subjects
bilateral field advantage ,brain ,neuropsychology ,working memory ,zdravo staranje ,kapaciteta vidnega delovnega spomina ,orientations ,aktivno vzdrževanje ,orientacije ,representational potential ,udc:159.953.2:159.91 ,reprezentacijski potencial ,bilateral advantage ,active maintenance ,naloga razpona ,nevropsihologija ,vidni spomin ,življenjska doba ,visual working memory capacity ,span task ,cognitive psychology ,možgani ,healthy aging ,kognitivna psihologija ,visual memory ,obojestranska prednost ,life span ,delovni spomin - Abstract
This article describes the data collected in four experiments presented in the paper "Visual working memory capacity is limited by two systems that change across lifespan" [1]. The data includes behavioural results from a sample of 397 healthy participants performing a visual working memory span task in which they had to maintain the orientations of items presented to the left, right, or both visual hemifields. It also includes a simulation of experimental data for a number of possible scenarios. The repository [2] encompasses individual raw data files, a Python preprocessing script used for filtering raw data and the resulting dataset, an R script used to carry out the statistical analysis of the preprocessed data as well as an R script used for the simulations reported in the original paper. Finally, the repository includes an R generated analysis report, containing results of statistical tests and related visual materials, as well as the results of the simulation.
- Published
- 2022
39. Interference due to shared features between action plans is influenced by working memory span
- Author
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Fournier, Lisa R., Behmer, Jr., Lawrence P., and Stubblefield, Alexandra M.
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- 2014
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40. Performance on the processing portion of complex working memory span tasks is related to working memory capacity estimates
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B. Hunter Ball, Lauren L. Richmond, Alexandra B. Morrison, and Lois K Burnett
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Computer science ,Working memory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Attentional control ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Cognition ,Fluid intelligence ,Span (engineering) ,Task (project management) ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Component (UML) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology (miscellaneous) ,Function (engineering) ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Individual differences in working memory capacity (WMC) have long been known to relate to performance in domains outside of WM, including attentional control, long-term memory, problem-solving, and fluid intelligence to name a few. Complex span WM tasks, composed of a processing component and a storage component, are often used to index WMC in these types of investigations. Capacity estimates are derived from performance on the storage component only, while processing performance is often largely ignored. Here, we explore the relationship between processing performance and WMC in a large dataset for each of three complex span tasks to better characterize how the components of these tasks might be related. We provide evidence that enforcing an 85% or better accuracy criterion for the processing portion of the task results in the removal of a disproportionate number of individuals exhibiting lower WMC estimates. We also find broad support for differences in processing task performance, characterized according to both accuracy and reaction time metrics, as a function of WMC. We suggest that researchers may want to include processing task performance measures, in addition to capacity estimates, in studies using complex span tasks to index WMC. This approach may better characterize the relationships between complex span task performance and performance in disparate domains of cognition.
- Published
- 2021
41. On the relation of working memory and multitasking: Memory span and synthetic work performance
- Author
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Thomas S. Redick
- Subjects
Hardware_MEMORYSTRUCTURES ,Relation (database) ,Working memory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Cognition ,Sample (statistics) ,Variance (accounting) ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Psychology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Memory span ,Human multitasking ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Applied Psychology ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Recent research has identified working memory as a critical component of multitasking ability. These studies showed that working memory accounted for multitasking variance over-and-above that predicted by other cognitive, personality, and experience-based variables. However, a limitation of these previous studies was that the tasks selected to measure working memory were dual-tasks themselves. The purpose of the current research was to determine if working memory measures must be dual-tasks to predict multitasking performance, or if other types of working memory measures that do not rely upon the dual-task methodology predict multitasking just as well, if not better. Three different serial order memory span tasks (one dual-task and two single-task) and one multitask were administered to a sample of healthy young adults. The results showed that single- and dual-task working memory measures predicted multitasking to a similar degree. The results indicate there is something fundamental about working memory's relationship with multitasking ability.
- Published
- 2016
42. Predicting negative affect variability and spontaneous emotion regulation: Can working memory span tasks estimate emotion regulatory capacity?
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K. Maria Nylocks, Pallavi Aurora, Karin G. Coifman, Melissa Bishop, Lindsey M. Matt, and Michael J. Kane
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Adult ,Male ,Experience sampling method ,Working memory ,05 social sciences ,Reading span task ,Short-term memory ,Cognition ,Affect (psychology) ,050105 experimental psychology ,Emotional Regulation ,Young Adult ,Memory, Short-Term ,Task analysis ,Humans ,Female ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,General Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
[Correction Notice: An Erratum for this article was reported online in Emotion on Jan 7 2021 (see record 2021-06077-001). In the article, in the Results and Discussion sections for Study 2 and in Table 6, it was stated that RSPAN scores predicted spontaneous down-regulation of negative affect from one diary signal to the next. However, because RSPAN scores are a person-level variable, it is an error to describe the results in that way. RSPAN scores cannot predict variability within person (i.e., signal to signal) but rather predict variability between person (i.e., person to person). Hence, a corrected interpretation would be to state that the RSPAN predicted levels of negative affect across the experience sampling diary, even when considering trait and state levels of affect and variability in daily stress. The analysis remains correct and the findings remain meaningful.] We tested the association of 2 versions of the Reading Span Task of working memory capacity, a conventional neutral version (RSPAN-N) and an adapted task with incidental negative content (RSPAN-E), for predicting objective indicators (behavioral displays; autonomic activation) of negative emotion regulation during a laboratory provocation, as well as reported negative emotion in daily life experience sampling. Across 2 samples, both tasks demonstrated utility as estimates of spontaneous negative emotion regulation capacity, predicting down-regulation of negative emotion in daily life and during a lab challenge. In addition, scores from both tasks appear to be independent of self-reported distress, a confound often present in studies of emotion regulation. There was some incremental evidence that the RSPAN-E may have advantages over the RSPAN-N for predicting some indices of emotion processing. Together these findings provide further evidence for the role of working memory (among other executive-control abilities) in emotion regulatory processing and suggest that RSPAN tasks may have considerable potential as tools in research on emotion processing and emotion regulation in psychological health and adjustment. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2021
43. Working memory predicts receptive vocabulary: a two-year longitudinal study of children with intellectual disabilities.
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Wang, Yaping, Liu, Yanchun, and Liu, Jia
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CHILDREN with intellectual disabilities ,SCHOOL children ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEMORY span ,VOCABULARY tests ,CHILDREN'S language - Abstract
Existing studies have suggested concurrent correlations between working memory and linguistic skills for children with intellectual disabilities; however, evidence for the longitudinal relationship is sparse. This study collected longitudinal data on working memory and linguistic skills from 103 Chinese school-aged children with intellectual disabilities. At the first time of testing, children were 6 to 16 years old and completed measurements of working memory and receptive vocabulary. The same measurements were administered 1 and 2 years later. Children's working memory was assessed by backward digit span and starting position selection, and receptive vocabulary was measured using the Peabody Picture Vocabulary test. The random intercept cross-lagged panel model results demonstrated that working memory scores significantly predicted changes in receptive vocabulary for children with intellectual disabilities over time, but the reverse pattern was not evident. To some extent, our findings suggested that interventions targeting boosting working memory may subsequently enhance receptive vocabulary in children with intellectual disabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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44. Memory self-efficacy and working memory.
- Author
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Mashinchi, Genna M., Hall, Stuart, and Cotter, Kelly A.
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SHORT-term memory ,EXECUTIVE function ,COGNITIVE ability ,MEMORY span ,EPISODIC memory ,CLINICAL neuropsychology - Abstract
Dementia affects multiple aspects of cognitive functioning, including working memory and executive functioning. Memory self-efficacy (MSE) has previously been related to episodic memory performance and to executive functioning, but little research has examined the relations between MSE and working memory. United States older adults (N = 197) were recruited via MTurk to complete an MSE questionnaire before completing a digit span working memory task. Hierarchical regression results revealed that the model accounted for a significant amount of variance in working memory performance after statistically controlling for several covariates, F(11, 179) = 4.94, p <.001, adjusted R
2 =.19. MSE explained a large and unique portion of variance (B = 1.02, SE = 0.17, p <.001). Based on our findings, one's beliefs about their memory are positively associated with their working memory performance. These novel findings provide support for neuropsychologists to consider using MSE measures and utilizing MSE interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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45. Serial memory mechanisms in monolingual and bilingual speakers.
- Author
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Spinu, Laura
- Subjects
- *
SENSORY memory , *MEMORY span , *COGNITIVE ability , *EXECUTIVE function , *LEARNING ability , *SHORT-term memory - Abstract
Aims and objectives: Recent findings suggest enhanced phonetic and phonological learning ability in bilinguals compared with monolinguals. While other cognitive differences between these two groups have been identified in the past, the most frequently investigated mechanism potentially underlying them has been executive function. When considering phonetic and phonological learning, however, we are faced with greater involvement of sensorimotor mechanisms, since audition, perception, and articulation are all important components in the learning of new patterns of pronunciation. The present study investigates memory mechanisms, with a focus on auditory sensory memory, in these two groups of speakers. Methodology: An adaptive digit span task with suffix effect was administered to two groups of speakers (bilinguals and monolinguals). Data and analysis: The two groups were compared in terms of accuracy rates (overall and by serial position), maximum digit span reached, and the proportion of participants who reached the highest list length. Findings/conclusions: The results show that bilinguals have longer digit spans and demonstrate higher accuracy compared with monolinguals for all serial positions inside every list length, suggesting an advantage not only in terms of recently heard items (i.e., recency effect, attributable to auditory sensory mechanisms) but also for the items heard in the beginning of longer list lengths (i.e., primacy effect, attributable to working memory). Originality: The role of sensory mechanisms in language learning, in particular auditory sensory (echoic) memory, was posited to have been underestimated to date. The current study addresses this gap by investigating alternative mechanisms that could support differences in behavior resulting from language experience of various types. Significance/implications: The connection between auditory sensory memory and linguistic experience suggests that sensory mechanisms are involved in some of the observed cognitive differences between bilinguals and monolinguals. In particular, sensorimotor mechanisms might at least partially account for more effective phonetic and phonological learning in bilinguals. The current study thus sheds more light on the coupling between cognitive and sensory functions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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46. Perks of blindness: Enhanced verbal memory span in blind over sighted adults.
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Arcos, Karen, Jaeggi, Susanne M., and Grossman, Emily D.
- Subjects
- *
VERBAL memory , *MEMORY span , *RECOLLECTION (Psychology) , *VISUAL memory , *SHORT-term memory , *SENSORY deprivation - Abstract
• Visual deprivation contributes to cognitive advantages such as improved verbal memory. • The blind outperformed the sighted on digit spans despite socioeconomic differences. • Encoding modalities differentially impact memory ability in blind and sighted humans. • Braille may tax blind individuals' working memory more than short-term memory. • Visual deprivation does not affect working memory assessed with an n-back task. Blind individuals commonly use verbal encoding (i.e. text-to-speech) and memory-based strategies (i.e. serial recall) for situations in which sighted individuals use vision (i.e. finding items). These strategies may serve to train cognitive systems responsible for maintaining and manipulating verbal information. To test this hypothesis, we investigate whether early visual deprivation is linked to improved verbal short-term and working memory abilities, and thus might illustrate experience-dependent plasticity in memory systems. We also test whether the sensory modality for encoding information influences performance. Our data show that blind adults recalled more items on a verbal short-term memory span task than sighted participants. Furthermore, blind individuals performed equally well on auditory forward and backward conditions despite the fact that recalling items in reverse order is more difficult for the general population. However, the benefits of recalling items in reverse order did not extend to the tactile domain, specifically, a braille version of the short-term memory digit span task in blind individuals. Furthermore, we observed no differences between blind and sighted individuals on a more demanding auditory n-back task evaluating more complex working memory processes. We conclude that the memory benefits associated with blindness might be restricted to auditory-verbal short-term memory and likely reflect strategy use and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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47. 3D Multiple Object Tracking or Adaptive Dual n-back Training Boosts Simple Verbal Working Memory Span but Not Multitasking Performance in Military Participants
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Sarah Forbes, Emma Rice, Oshin Vartanian, Kristen King, and Tonya Stokes-Hendriks
- Subjects
Working memory ,Military psychology ,Human multitasking ,Cognition ,Workload ,Psychology ,Executive functions ,Cognitive training ,Cognitive psychology ,Task (project management) - Abstract
There is a growing literature demonstrating that a short regimen of NeuroTracker—a task that trains 3D multiple object tracking skills—can improve various aspects of cognition (attention, memory) and performance in regular and elite athletes. Vartanian et al. Military Psychology 28:353–360, (2016) extended the application of NeuroTracker to the military domain by demonstrating that it can result in gains in simple working memory (WM) span (verbal, visual, and matrix) in Canadian Special Forces members who trained under the experimenters’ supervision. Here, we conducted a follow-up study to determine whether similar gains would accrue if general Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) members were to train unsupervised—a much more likely scenario within military contexts. We randomly assigned CAF members (n = 66) to one of the three conditions: (1) NeuroTracker, (2) adaptive dual n-back, or (3) passive control. Participants in the training conditions trained for 20 min per day on ten separate days within a 2-week period. Before and after training, we administered simple WM span measures (verbal and matrix). To examine far transfer to a task drawing on executive functions, we also administered a multitasking paradigm that deploys four visual and auditory tasks in parallel, designed to evaluate operator performance and workload analogous to activities that aircraft crew perform in flight (Multi-Attribute Task Battery: MATB-II). Participants in both training conditions improved on the trained task and exhibited gains in simple verbal WM span. No gains were observed on MATB-II. Our results demonstrate that self-administered training on NeuroTracker or the adaptive dual n-back task can lead to gains in simple verbal WM span but not in simple matrix WM span or multitasking. In other words, in relation to both NeuroTracker and adaptive dual n-back training, we observed near transfer but not far transfer. We discuss the implications for cognitive training interventions in military contexts.
- Published
- 2021
48. Working memory span and receptive vocabulary assessment in Urdu speaking children with speech sound disorder.
- Author
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Yasmin, Tahira, Hafeez, Huma, Sadia, Aatika, Lubna, Mubarak, Tarar, Sharmeen Aslam, Raza, Muhammad Hashim, and Basra, Muhammad Asim Raza
- Subjects
- *
MEMORY span , *SPEECH disorders , *SHORT-term memory , *ARTICULATION (Speech) , *PAKISTANIS , *INTELLIGIBILITY of speech - Abstract
Emerging evidence suggests that impaired speech may be related to reduced working memory (WM). The current study aimed to validate and compare the influence of articulation, short-term memory (STM), WM, and receptive vocabulary abilities of Pakistani children with speech sound disorder (SSD; N = 50) versus typically developing (TD; N = 30) children aged 7–13 years. Assessments included the Test for Assessment of Articulation and Phonology in Urdu (TAAPU), Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-4, translated to Urdu (U-PPVT-4), and Digit Memory Test (DMT) used to determine speech articulation, receptive vocabulary, and memory abilities respectively. The percentage correct consonants (PCC) score was used to divide the SSD group further into SSD severity groups. The TD and SSD groups significantly differed in performance on all tasks (p < 0.05). Moreover, the SSD severity groups showed significant differences (p < 0.0001) in performance on different components of TAAPU (total errors and substitution errors) and DMT tasks. However, the SSD severity groups did not show significant differences in performance on the U-PPVT-4. Correlational analyses indicate statistically significant correlations of PCC with STM, WM, and receptive vocabulary. Regression analyses suggested that both WM and STM contribute to speech intelligibility in children with SSD. Our findings in Urdu-speaking children support previous results in English-speaking children suggesting the articulation skills, receptive vocabulary, STM, and WM were less developed in children with SSD than in TD children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Treino musical e capacidade da memória operacional em crianças iniciantes, veteranas e sem conhecimentos musicais Musical training and working memory span in beginners, veterans and with no musical knowledge children
- Author
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Fabiana Silva Ribeiro and Flávia Heloísa Dos Santos
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AWMA ,memória operacional ,treino musical ,ensino da música ,working memory ,musical training ,music teaching ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
A memória operacional e a atividade musical ativam áreas encefálicas recíprocas e homólogas, contudo não há evidências se o treino musical pode ampliar a capacidade da memória operacional. Objetivo: Avaliar o desempenho do treino musical sob a memória operacional em crianças de 9 e 10 anos de idade, praticantes de treino musical e sem experiência musical. PARTICIPANTES: Crianças Iniciantes (n=20), Veteranas (n=20) e Grupo Controle (n=20). MATERIAIS: Instrumentos computadorizados para avaliação da memória operacional. RESULTADOS: Crianças veteranas apresentaram melhores pontuações no BCPR (Teste de Repetição de Pseudopalavras para crianças brasileiras) e em subtestes da AWMA (Avaliação Automatizada da Memória Operacional). CONCLUSÃO: O treino musical parece ter contribuído para o desenvolvimento da memória operacional em crianças veteranas no programa de treino musical.Working memory and musical activity activate reciprocal and homologues brain areas. However, there is a lack of evidence if musical training can amplify the working memory span. Objective: To assess the performance of musical training on working memory in children aged 9 and 10 years old who regularly have musical training or with no musical training at all. PARTICIPANTS: Beginners (n=20), Veterans (n=20) and a Control Group (n=20). MATERIALS: Computerized instruments to assess working memory. RESULTS: Veteran children presented higher scores in BCPR (Brazilian Children's Test of Pseudoword Repetition) and in specific tasks of AWMA (Automated Working Memory Assessment). CONCLUSION: Musical training seems to have contributed for working memory development in veteran children under musical training programs.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Aging's Effect on Working Memory—Modality Comparison.
- Author
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Heled, Eyal and Levi, Ohad
- Subjects
SHORT-term memory ,MEMORY span ,YOUNG adults ,AGE groups ,MODALITY (Linguistics) ,VISUAL memory - Abstract
Research exploring the impact of development and aging on working memory (WM) has primarily concentrated on visual and verbal domains, with limited attention paid to the tactile modality. The current study sought to evaluate WM encompassing storage and manipulation across these three modalities, spanning from childhood to old age. The study included 134 participants, divided into four age groups: 7–8, 11–12, 25–35, and 60–69. Each participant completed the Visuospatial Span, Digit Span, and Tactual Span, with forward and backward recall. The findings demonstrated a consistent trend in both forward and backward stages. Performance improved until young adulthood, progressively diminishing with advancing age. In the forward stage, the Tactual Span performance was worse than that of the Digit and Visuospatial Span for all participants. In the backward stage, the Visuospatial Span outperformed the Digit and Tactual Span across all age groups. Furthermore, the Tactual Span backward recall exhibited significantly poorer performance than the other modalities, primarily in the youngest and oldest age groups. In conclusion, age impacts WM differently across modalities, with tactile storage capacity being the most vulnerable. Additionally, tactile manipulation skills develop later in childhood but deteriorate sooner in adulthood, indicating a distinct component within tactile WM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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