An adult model of preschool children’s speech memory

In previous work, it has been demonstrated that phonetic similarity among the items in a spoken list interferes with recall much more in school-aged children than in preschool children. The basis of this developmental change, however, is unclear. In the present study we examined the possibility that a developmental increase in the use of covert verbal rehearsal accounts for the change in the effects of phonetic similarity. Adults who recalled lists of spoken words during articulatory suppression tasks that blocked covert rehearsal were found to display patterns of recall that resembled those ordinarily found in 5-year-old children. The specific aspects of rehearsal responsible for these effects also were investigated.

[1]  N. Cowan,et al.  Temporal properties of memory for speech in preschool children , 1986, Memory & cognition.

[2]  R. Treiman Phonemic awareness and spelling: children's judgments do not always agree with adults. , 1985, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[3]  R. Treiman,et al.  Common phoneme and overall similarity relations among spoken syllables: Their use by children and adults , 1982, Journal of psycholinguistic research.

[4]  N. Cowan,et al.  Echoic storage in infant perception. , 1982, Child development.

[5]  J. Hagen,et al.  Induced Versus Spontaneous Rehearsal in Short-Term Memory in Nursery School Children. Study M: Development of Selective Attention Abilities. , 1968 .

[6]  J. Bebko Can recall differences among children be attributed to rehearsal effects , 1979 .

[7]  P. Bertelson,et al.  Does awareness of speech as a sequence of phones arise spontaneously? , 1979, Cognition.

[8]  L. Siegel,et al.  Short-term memory processes in children with reading and arithmetic learning disabilities. , 1984 .

[9]  D. J. Murray Articulation and acoustic confusability in short-term memory. , 1968 .

[10]  L. R. Peterson,et al.  Some effects of minimizing articulation on short-term retention. , 1971 .

[11]  Nelson Cowan,et al.  The Phonological and Metaphonological Representation of Speech: Evidence from Fluent Backward Talkers , 1985 .

[12]  John H. Flavell,et al.  Spontaneous verbal rehearsal in a memory task as a function of age , 1966 .

[13]  C. Read,et al.  Children’s Awareness of Language, with Emphasis on Sound Systems , 1978 .

[14]  Murray Dj The role of speech responses in short-term memory. , 1967 .

[15]  J. Flavell,et al.  Spontaneous and induced verbal rehearsal in a recall task. , 1967, Child development.

[16]  D. S. Hayes,et al.  The phonetic effect in preschool children: The influence of overt rehearsal and verbal instructions , 1975 .

[17]  V. Mann Reading skill and language skill , 1984 .

[18]  B. Levy,et al.  Role of articulation in auditory and visual short-term memory , 1971 .

[19]  Donald Shankweiler,et al.  The speech code and learning to read. , 1979 .

[20]  J. Alegria,et al.  Genetic aspects of verbal mediation in memory. , 1979, Child development.

[21]  V. Mann,et al.  Children’s memory for sentences and word strings in relation to reading ability , 1980, Memory & cognition.

[22]  R. J. Irwin,et al.  The development of auditory temporal acuity in children. , 1985 .

[23]  C. Hulme Developmental differences in the effects of acoustic similarity on memory span. , 1984 .

[24]  R. Conrad,et al.  The chronology of the development of covert speech in children. , 1971 .

[25]  Echoic memory processes in good and poor readers. , 1986, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.