Interaction between working memory and long-term memory: A study in children with and without language impairment
Abstract
Individual differences in working memory have been related to interactions between working memory and long-term memory (LTM). The present study examined this interaction in children with and without language impairment. We used two listening span tasks and two nonword repetition tasks. The results suggest a strong interaction among age, language status, and task complexity. Children with specific language impairment showed consistently poor performance across tasks and indicated a weakness in using long-term knowledge to support working memory performance. The findings show that these children do not benefit from various manipulations designed to enhance working memory performance via LTM support due to a combination of inefficiencies in maintaining and updating items in working memory and retrieving information from LTM, in part because of their poor resistance to interference. © 2014 Hogrefe Publishing.
Publication Title
Zeitschrift fur Psychologie / Journal of Psychology
Recommended Citation
Marton, K., & Eichorn, N. (2014). Interaction between working memory and long-term memory: A study in children with and without language impairment. Zeitschrift fur Psychologie / Journal of Psychology, 222 (2), 90-99. https://doi.org/10.1027/2151-2604/a000170