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The developmental influence of primary memory capacity on working memory and academic achievement

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The developmental influence of primary memory capacity on working memory and academic achievement. / Hall, Debbora; Jarrold, Christopher; Towse, John et al.
In: Developmental Psychology, Vol. 51, No. 8, 08.2015, p. 1131-1147.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Hall, D, Jarrold, C, Towse, J & Zarandi, AL 2015, 'The developmental influence of primary memory capacity on working memory and academic achievement', Developmental Psychology, vol. 51, no. 8, pp. 1131-1147. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0039464

APA

Hall, D., Jarrold, C., Towse, J., & Zarandi, A. L. (2015). The developmental influence of primary memory capacity on working memory and academic achievement. Developmental Psychology, 51(8), 1131-1147. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0039464

Vancouver

Hall D, Jarrold C, Towse J, Zarandi AL. The developmental influence of primary memory capacity on working memory and academic achievement. Developmental Psychology. 2015 Aug;51(8):1131-1147. Epub 2015 Jun 15. doi: 10.1037/a0039464

Author

Hall, Debbora ; Jarrold, Christopher ; Towse, John et al. / The developmental influence of primary memory capacity on working memory and academic achievement. In: Developmental Psychology. 2015 ; Vol. 51, No. 8. pp. 1131-1147.

Bibtex

@article{3d457db4aa844909bb12dd890459a225,
title = "The developmental influence of primary memory capacity on working memory and academic achievement",
abstract = "In this study, we investigate the development of primary memory capacity among children. Children between the ages of 5-8 completed three novel tasks (split span, interleaved lists, and a modified free recall task) that measured primary memory by estimating the number of items in the focus of attention that could be spontaneously recalled in serial order. These tasks were calibrated against traditional measures of simple and complex span. Clear age- related changes in these primary memory estimates were observed. There were marked individual differences in primary memory capacity but each novel measure was predictive of simple span performance. Among older children, each measure shared variance with reading and mathematics performance, whereas for younger children the interleaved lists task was the strongest single predictor of academic ability. We argue that these novel tasks have considerable potential for the measurement of primary memory capacity and provide new, complementary ways of measuring the transient memory processes that predict academic performance. The interleaved lists task also shared features with interference control tasks, and our findings suggest that young children have a particular difficulty in resisting distraction, and that variance in the ability to resist distraction is also shared with measures of educational attainment.",
keywords = "primary memory, reading, mathematics, working memory, managing distraction",
author = "Debbora Hall and Christopher Jarrold and John Towse and Zarandi, {Amy L.}",
note = "'This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record.'",
year = "2015",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1037/a0039464",
language = "English",
volume = "51",
pages = "1131--1147",
journal = "Developmental Psychology",
issn = "0012-1649",
publisher = "American Psychological Association Inc.",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The developmental influence of primary memory capacity on working memory and academic achievement

AU - Hall, Debbora

AU - Jarrold, Christopher

AU - Towse, John

AU - Zarandi, Amy L.

N1 - 'This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record.'

PY - 2015/8

Y1 - 2015/8

N2 - In this study, we investigate the development of primary memory capacity among children. Children between the ages of 5-8 completed three novel tasks (split span, interleaved lists, and a modified free recall task) that measured primary memory by estimating the number of items in the focus of attention that could be spontaneously recalled in serial order. These tasks were calibrated against traditional measures of simple and complex span. Clear age- related changes in these primary memory estimates were observed. There were marked individual differences in primary memory capacity but each novel measure was predictive of simple span performance. Among older children, each measure shared variance with reading and mathematics performance, whereas for younger children the interleaved lists task was the strongest single predictor of academic ability. We argue that these novel tasks have considerable potential for the measurement of primary memory capacity and provide new, complementary ways of measuring the transient memory processes that predict academic performance. The interleaved lists task also shared features with interference control tasks, and our findings suggest that young children have a particular difficulty in resisting distraction, and that variance in the ability to resist distraction is also shared with measures of educational attainment.

AB - In this study, we investigate the development of primary memory capacity among children. Children between the ages of 5-8 completed three novel tasks (split span, interleaved lists, and a modified free recall task) that measured primary memory by estimating the number of items in the focus of attention that could be spontaneously recalled in serial order. These tasks were calibrated against traditional measures of simple and complex span. Clear age- related changes in these primary memory estimates were observed. There were marked individual differences in primary memory capacity but each novel measure was predictive of simple span performance. Among older children, each measure shared variance with reading and mathematics performance, whereas for younger children the interleaved lists task was the strongest single predictor of academic ability. We argue that these novel tasks have considerable potential for the measurement of primary memory capacity and provide new, complementary ways of measuring the transient memory processes that predict academic performance. The interleaved lists task also shared features with interference control tasks, and our findings suggest that young children have a particular difficulty in resisting distraction, and that variance in the ability to resist distraction is also shared with measures of educational attainment.

KW - primary memory

KW - reading

KW - mathematics

KW - working memory

KW - managing distraction

U2 - 10.1037/a0039464

DO - 10.1037/a0039464

M3 - Journal article

VL - 51

SP - 1131

EP - 1147

JO - Developmental Psychology

JF - Developmental Psychology

SN - 0012-1649

IS - 8

ER -