Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
917894 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2016 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Age-related changes on different component processes of WM updating were investigated.•Age-related changes were found in the retrieval component of updating.•There were no age differences in the transformation and substitution components.•The retrieval component may contribute to the age trends in many WM Updating tasks.

The aim of this study was to investigate possible age-related changes throughout childhood and adolescence in different component processes of working memory updating (WMU): retrieval, transformation, and substitution. A set of numerical WMU tasks was administered to four age groups (8-, 11-, 14-, and 21-year-olds). To isolate the effect of each of the WMU components, participants performed different versions of a task that included different combinations of the WMU components. The results showed an expected overall decrease in response times and an increase in accuracy performance with age. Most important, specific age-related changes in the retrieval component were found, demonstrating that the effect of retrieval on accuracy was larger in children than in adolescents or young adults. These findings indicate that the availability of representations from outside the focus of attention may change with age. Thus, the retrieval component of updating could contribute to the age-related changes observed in the performance of many updating tasks.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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