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Working memory in children with reading disabilities

TLDR
It is suggested that working memory skills indexed by complex memory tasks represent an important constraint on the acquisition of skill and knowledge in reading and mathematics.
About
This article is published in Journal of Experimental Child Psychology.The article was published on 2006-03-01 and is currently open access. It has received 742 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Phonological awareness & Short-term memory.

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Citations
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Short-Term Memory, Working Memory, and Executive Functioning in Preschoolers: Longitudinal Predictors of Mathematical Achievement at Age 7 Years

TL;DR: Correlational and regression analyses revealed that visual short-term and working memory were found to specifically predict math achievement at each time point, while executive function skills predicted learning in general rather than learning in one specific domain.
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Investigating the predictive roles of working memory and IQ in academic attainment

TL;DR: It is found that working memory at the start of formal education is a more powerful predictor of subsequent academic success than IQ, which has important implications for education, particularly with respect to intervention.
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Adaptive training leads to sustained enhancement of poor working memory in children

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether these problems can be overcome by a training program designed to boost working memory, and found that common impairments in working memory and associated learning difficulties may be overcome with behavioral treatment.
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Phonological skills and their role in learning to read: A meta-analytic review.

TL;DR: Findings support the pivotal role of phonemic awareness as a predictor of individual differences in reading development and whether such a relationship is a causal one and the implications of research in this area for current approaches to the teaching of reading and interventions for children with reading difficulties.
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Nonword repetition and word learning: The nature of the relationship.

TL;DR: This paper presented a theoretical framework designed to accommodate core evidence that the abilities to repeat nonwords and to learn the phonological forms of new words are closely linked, and concluded that word learning mediated by temporary phonological storage is a primitive learning mechanism that is particularly important in the early stages of acquiring a language, but remains available to support word learning across the life span.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Operational efficiency and the growth of short-term memory span

TL;DR: The authors showed that developmental increases in memory span do not result from increases in total processing space, rather, with development, basic operations become faster and more efficient, and that more space becomes available for storage as a result.
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Working memory capacity and its relation to general intelligence

TL;DR: A review of the recent research reveals that WMC and g are indeed highly related, but not identical and WM span tasks involve an executive-control mechanism that is recruited to combat interference and this ability is mediated by portions of the prefrontal cortex.
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Changing Relations between Phonological Processing Abilities and Word-Level Reading as Children Develop from Beginning to Skilled Readers: A 5-Year Longitudinal Study.

TL;DR: This paper examined the relationship between phonological processing abilities and word-level reading skills in a longitudinal correlational study of 216 children from kindergarten through 4th grade, and found that individual differences in phonological awareness were related to subsequent individual differences of word level reading for every time period examined.
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The separability of working memory resources for spatial thinking and language processing: an individual differences approach.

TL;DR: The current study demonstrates the separability of spatial and verbal working memory resources among college students and demonstrates that both the processing and storage components of working memory tasks are important for predicting performance on spatial thinking and language processing tasks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Working memory skills and educational attainment: evidence from national curriculum assessments at 7 and 14 years of age

TL;DR: The relationship between working memory skills and performance on national curriculum assessments in English, mathematics and science was explored in groups of children aged 7 and 14 years by as mentioned in this paper, who found that children's levels of attainment in both English and mathematics were significantly associated with working memory scores, and in particular with performance on complex span tasks.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (12)
Q1. What measures were significant predictors of mathematics ability in Model 4?

Verbal IQ and complex memory were both significant predictors of mathematics ability in Model 4, which incorporated the complex memory and phonological short-term memory measures. 

One limitation of the assessment of working memory skill in the present study is thedependence of verbally-based assessment methods only. 

Swanson has argued that working memory provides a resource that allows the learner to integrate information retrieved from long-term memory with current inputs, and so that poor working memory capacities will compromise the child’s attempts to carry out such important cognitive activities (Swanson & Saez, 2003; Swanson & Beebe-Frankenberger, 2004). 

In activities such as holding a sentence in mind while writing it down, the heavy storage and processing can be reduced by keeping sentences short and redundant, and using highly familiarvocabulary. 

Test-retest reliability coefficients for children aged between 5 and 8 years are .53, .74, and .83 for backward digit recall, counting recall and listening recall respectively. 

Tasks with complex structures could be simplified into component parts as a means of reducing the burden of monitoring the child’s current place within the task. 

The independentpredictors of reading ability in this analysis were mathematics and language scores, but not complex memory scores.----------------------------Tables 5 and 6 about here----------------------------The predictors of mathematics scores were also explored in a series of multipleregression analyses. 

Participants also completed the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children - 3rd UK Edition (WISC-IIIUK; Wechsler, 1992), yielding measures of verbal IQ and performance IQ. 

working memory and phonological short-term memory have been found to have dissociable links with learning abilities (e.g., Gathercole & Pickering, 2000; Swanson et al., 2004), suggesting that variation in working memory scores is not mediated simply by the contribution of phonological STM to performance on complex memory tasks (e.g., Baddeley & Logie, 1999). 

The rhyme task assesses the child’s ability to identify rhyming words in sequences of three monosyllabic words such as sand, hand, cup and bead, wheat, seat. 

The authors propose that this association arizes because working memory acts as a bottleneck for learning in classroom activities, and suggest that effective management of working memory loads in structured learning activities may ameliorate the problems of learning that are associated with impairments of working memory. 

The association between working memory and reading ability in this sample of childrenwith learning disabilities was not mediated by fluid intelligence, verbal abilities, short-term memory or phonological processing skills. 

Trending Questions (1)
How to study with poor working memory?

These findings suggest that working memory skills indexed by complex memory tasks represent an important constraint on the acquisition of skill and knowledge in reading and mathematics.