1. Can learning disabilities be determined from working memory performance?
- Author
-
Ewers Ca, K F Cochran, and Swanson Hl
- Subjects
Male ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Academic achievement ,Models, Psychological ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,0504 sociology ,Memory span ,medicine ,Humans ,Memory disorder ,Child ,Recall ,Working memory ,Learning Disabilities ,05 social sciences ,050401 social sciences methods ,050301 education ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Achievement ,High memory ,Memory, Short-Term ,General Health Professions ,Imagination ,Female ,Baddeley's model of working memory ,Psychology ,Factor Analysis, Statistical ,0503 education ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
This study assumes that children of various academic abilities may be characterized by different patterns of memory function. To test this assumption, subgroups of children were identified through a hierarchical cluster analysis based upon a test battery of sentence span, preload, and concurrent memory demand tasks. One subtype presented a profile of children with learning disabilities showing severe memory performance deficits, while another subgroup yielded high memory and high academic performance. Four additional subtypes had variations in memory performance, which in turn reflected variations in external criteria related to reading, mathematics, and spelling performance. For each subtype, performance strengths and weaknesses were characterized within Baddeley's (1986) working memory model. The study provides partial validation for the classification of children with learning disabilities on psychometric measures according to patterns of memory performance.
- Published
- 1990