Tone series and the nature of working memory capacity development
Autor: | Kyle O. Hardman, Katherine M. Clark, Todd R. Schachtman, J. Scott Saults, Nelson Cowan, Bret A. Glass |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Auditory perception Visual perception Adolescent genetic structures Intelligence Short-term memory Psychology Child Article 050105 experimental psychology Developmental psychology 03 medical and health sciences Tone (musical instrument) 0302 clinical medicine Visual Objects Developmental and Educational Psychology Humans 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Child Life-span and Life-course Studies Demography computer.programming_language Psychological Tests Working memory Sensory memory 05 social sciences Middle Aged Serial position effect Memory Short-Term Practice Psychological Pattern Recognition Physiological Auditory Perception Female Psychology computer Music 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Cognitive psychology |
Zdroj: | Developmental Psychology. 54:663-676 |
ISSN: | 1939-0599 0012-1649 |
DOI: | 10.1037/dev0000466 |
Popis: | Recent advances in understanding visual working memory, the limited information held in mind for use in ongoing processing, are extended here to examine auditory working memory development. Research with arrays of visual objects has shown how to distinguish the capacity, in terms of the number of objects retained, from the precision of the object representations. We adapt the technique to sequences of nonmusical tones, in an investigation including children (6-13 years, N = 84) and adults (26-50 years, N = 31). For each series of 1 to 4 tones, the participant responded by using an 80-choice scale to try to reproduce the tone at a queried serial position. Despite the much longer-lasting usefulness of sensory memory for tones compared with visual objects, the observed tone capacity was similar to previous findings for visual capacity. The results also constrain theories of childhood working memory development, indicating increases with age in both the capacity and the precision of the tone representations, similar to the visual studies, rather than age differences in time-based memory decay. The findings, including patterns of correlations between capacity, precision, and some auxiliary tasks and questionnaires, establish capacity and precision as dissociable processes and place important constraints on various hypotheses of working memory development. (PsycINFO Database Record |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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