Sebastian and Hernandez Gil (2012) Flashcards
Aim
Investigate development of phonological loop in working memory
Sample
575 spanish childrenPre, primary and secondary school in Madrid 5-17 yrs old
Setting of experiment
Field settings - schoolds
Independent variable
Years of school
Dependent variable
Mean verbal digit span
Procedure of digit span testing
Sequences of random digits, increase by 1 digit every correct answerRead aloud to each participant individually
Findings
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
Conclusions
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)
Construct validity
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
CA
Children were not tested for hearing impairmentsImpairments could have influenced performance on digit span
Weakness
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
Application
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
Representative
only used spanish speaking children in madrid, so cant generalise to other languages beyond this population
Use of cross sectional groups
Allowed them to track development of digit span over time without extended duration of conducting longitudinal study
Using digit span as a measurement
ArtificalLimited task validity as children unlikely to learn random sequences of numbers in day-to-day experiences