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The role of verbal labels on flexible memory retrieval at 12-months of age

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The role of verbal labels on flexible memory retrieval at 12-months of age. / Taylor, Gemma; Liu, Hao; Herbert, Jane S.
In: Infant Behavior and Development, Vol. 45, No. Part A, 11.2016, p. 11-17.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Taylor, G, Liu, H & Herbert, JS 2016, 'The role of verbal labels on flexible memory retrieval at 12-months of age', Infant Behavior and Development, vol. 45, no. Part A, pp. 11-17. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.infbeh.2016.08.002

APA

Taylor, G., Liu, H., & Herbert, J. S. (2016). The role of verbal labels on flexible memory retrieval at 12-months of age. Infant Behavior and Development, 45(Part A), 11-17. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.infbeh.2016.08.002

Vancouver

Taylor G, Liu H, Herbert JS. The role of verbal labels on flexible memory retrieval at 12-months of age. Infant Behavior and Development. 2016 Nov;45(Part A):11-17. Epub 2016 Aug 24. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2016.08.002

Author

Taylor, Gemma ; Liu, Hao ; Herbert, Jane S. / The role of verbal labels on flexible memory retrieval at 12-months of age. In: Infant Behavior and Development. 2016 ; Vol. 45, No. Part A. pp. 11-17.

Bibtex

@article{fd3367a4e3604b6480f2993ca183034e,
title = "The role of verbal labels on flexible memory retrieval at 12-months of age",
abstract = "The provision of verbal labels enhances 12-month-old infants{\textquoteright} memory flexibility across a form change in a puppet imitation task (Herbert, 2011), although the mechanisms for this effect remain unclear. Here we investigate whether verbal labels can scaffold flexible memory retrieval when task difficulty increases and consider the mechanism responsible for the effect of language cues on early memory flexibility. Twelve-month-old infants were provided with English, Chinese, or empty language cues during a difficult imitation task, a combined change in the puppet{\textquoteright}s colour and form at the test (Hayne et al., 1997). Imitation performance by infants in the English language condition only exceeded baseline performance after the 10-min delay. Thus, verbal labels facilitated flexible memory retrieval on this task. There were no correlations between infants{\textquoteright} language comprehension and imitation performance. Thus, it is likely that verbal labels facilitate both attention and categorisation during encoding and retrieval.",
keywords = "Memory flexibility, Memory development, Imitation, Infant",
author = "Gemma Taylor and Hao Liu and Herbert, {Jane S.}",
note = "Author no longer at Lancaster",
year = "2016",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1016/j.infbeh.2016.08.002",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "11--17",
journal = "Infant Behavior and Development",
issn = "0163-6383",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
number = "Part A",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The role of verbal labels on flexible memory retrieval at 12-months of age

AU - Taylor, Gemma

AU - Liu, Hao

AU - Herbert, Jane S.

N1 - Author no longer at Lancaster

PY - 2016/11

Y1 - 2016/11

N2 - The provision of verbal labels enhances 12-month-old infants’ memory flexibility across a form change in a puppet imitation task (Herbert, 2011), although the mechanisms for this effect remain unclear. Here we investigate whether verbal labels can scaffold flexible memory retrieval when task difficulty increases and consider the mechanism responsible for the effect of language cues on early memory flexibility. Twelve-month-old infants were provided with English, Chinese, or empty language cues during a difficult imitation task, a combined change in the puppet’s colour and form at the test (Hayne et al., 1997). Imitation performance by infants in the English language condition only exceeded baseline performance after the 10-min delay. Thus, verbal labels facilitated flexible memory retrieval on this task. There were no correlations between infants’ language comprehension and imitation performance. Thus, it is likely that verbal labels facilitate both attention and categorisation during encoding and retrieval.

AB - The provision of verbal labels enhances 12-month-old infants’ memory flexibility across a form change in a puppet imitation task (Herbert, 2011), although the mechanisms for this effect remain unclear. Here we investigate whether verbal labels can scaffold flexible memory retrieval when task difficulty increases and consider the mechanism responsible for the effect of language cues on early memory flexibility. Twelve-month-old infants were provided with English, Chinese, or empty language cues during a difficult imitation task, a combined change in the puppet’s colour and form at the test (Hayne et al., 1997). Imitation performance by infants in the English language condition only exceeded baseline performance after the 10-min delay. Thus, verbal labels facilitated flexible memory retrieval on this task. There were no correlations between infants’ language comprehension and imitation performance. Thus, it is likely that verbal labels facilitate both attention and categorisation during encoding and retrieval.

KW - Memory flexibility

KW - Memory development

KW - Imitation

KW - Infant

U2 - 10.1016/j.infbeh.2016.08.002

DO - 10.1016/j.infbeh.2016.08.002

M3 - Journal article

VL - 45

SP - 11

EP - 17

JO - Infant Behavior and Development

JF - Infant Behavior and Development

SN - 0163-6383

IS - Part A

ER -