Abstract

Phonological working memory was examined in a group of children with phonological impairment and a group of normal age-matched controls. Based on the Baddeley and Hitch model of working memory, traditional serial recall tasks of word length and phonological similarity were used to examine the efficiency of subvocal rehearsal and short-term storage, respectively. Analysis of recall performance for lists of four and six words revealed that, in comparison to agematched controls, children with phonological impairment are similarly sensitive to the effects of word length and phonological similarity, but demonstrate poorer overall recall for word lists of unrelated items. Theoretically, these findings suggest that the subvocal rehearsal mechanism and the phonological short-term store appear to be operating efficiently in this group of children with phonological impairment. Therefore their poorer recall performance may be attributable to interactions between short-term memory processes and aspects of phonological knowledge stored in long-term memory rather than to specific components of a phonological loop.

Full Text
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