Sebastian and Hernandez Gil (2012) Flashcards

1
Q

Aim

A

Investigate development of phonological loop in working memory

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2
Q

Sample

A

575 spanish childrenPre, primary and secondary school in Madrid 5-17 yrs old

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3
Q

Setting of experiment

A

Field settings - schoolds

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4
Q

Independent variable

A

Years of school

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5
Q

Dependent variable

A

Mean verbal digit span

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6
Q

Procedure of digit span testing

A

Sequences of random digits, increase by 1 digit every correct answerRead aloud to each participant individually

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7
Q

Findings

A

5 yrs = mean 3.76 digit span11 yrs = 5.2817 yrs = 5.91Elderly anglo-saxons = higher digit span than 5/6 yr oldsDementia has similar to 5/6 yr olds

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8
Q

Conclusions

A

Digit span increases with ageCapacity of phonological loop affected by age rather than dementia(Spanish = lower digit span than english -> but word length is longerWord length effects because we rehearse words sub-vocally, should be no difference in digit span)

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9
Q

Construct validity

A

HighControl over extraneous variables => used standardised procedures, digits read to them at 1 per second which is the same for everyoneHelped control confounding variables to a reasonable degree of internal validity

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10
Q

CA

A

Children were not tested for hearing impairmentsImpairments could have influenced performance on digit span

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11
Q

Weakness

A

Low ecological validity, way they measured STM does not equate to real lifeORDementia group sample smallConclusions regarding functionality of phonological loop in old age may be questionable

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12
Q

Application

A

People with longer digit spans are better readers and have higher general intelligenceGignac and Weiss -> Shorter digit spans linked to dyslexiaDigit span can be used to explain important real-life cognitive skills

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13
Q

Representative

A

only used spanish speaking children in madrid, so cant generalise to other languages beyond this population

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14
Q

Use of cross sectional groups

A

Allowed them to track development of digit span over time without extended duration of conducting longitudinal study

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15
Q

Using digit span as a measurement

A

ArtificalLimited task validity as children unlikely to learn random sequences of numbers in day-to-day experiences

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16
Q

Replicabilty

A

Able to test verbal digit span across cultures easilyto understand cross-cultural development and individual differences in phonological processing in working memory

17
Q

Ecological validity

A

LowVerbal memory barely used to memorise digit lists, however, digit span linked to reading ability intelligence suggesting similar to verbal memory

18
Q

Construct validity

A

Digit span tests linked to ability intelligence, good general measure of verbal memory