Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Sebastian and Hernandez-Gil - Digit Span
- Aim
- wanted to study the developmental
pattern of working memory over time
- changes from ageing. eg.'dementia'
- analyse the developmental pattern of the phonological loop
in children aged 5-17 years
- looking at the age at which the digit span stopped 'increasing in
adulthood/adolescence'
- look at the decline of digit span in older people including those with dementia
- to see if anglo-saxon data were replicated or if higher for spanish speakers
- Procedure
- first part
- gathered primary data
- used 5-17 year olds
- all born in spain
- none had learning difficulties
- control for education and cognitive differences
- Second part
- used secondary data
- elderly people without impairment
- with alzheimers and fronto-temperol dementia
- used 25 healthier older people as a control group
- 25 alzheimers
- 9 fronto-temperol dementia
- Results
- the preschool children aged five years had a
very low digit span
- 6-8 year olds had a very similar digit span
- the increase in one digit, occured at 9 years old and
rose to 11 years old
- older children had similar digit span to one another
- differed from age groups above them
- similar digit span was found in 15-17 year olds
- researchers compared their data to data from the Wechsler
Intelligence Scale for children who digit span increases with
age
- the healthier older people had a higher digit span
- alzheimers dementia participants had the lowest mean digit span
- Conclusions
- main conclusion = digit span increases with age from 5-17 years old
- contrasts with anglo-saxon data
- sebastian and hernandez-gil highlighted the
differences in word length between Spanish and
English
- spanish digit words are longer than english digit words
- subvocal rehearsal does not start until 7 years old
- English studies aged 5-6, digit span was around four which matches the spanish study
- digit span of the healthy older people was
similar to that of a 7 year old - shows there is
a decline in digit span with age
- the capacity of the phonological loop seems to be affected by the age
but not by dementia
- Strengths
- the results are reliable because it was compared with data in the
spanish population and with other studies
- WISC-IV data showed a very similar pattern in development - increasing up to age 17
- careful controls were used in the study
- they used spanish children and the spanish language - control varaibles
- they analyse not only for actual age using school years
but also for age group so they have information from
which to draw conclusions
- Weaknesses
- the task is artificial - we don't generally recall lists of digits
- lack of validity
- although experiments lack validity because of the controls
and artifically of the tasks
- the digits are subvocalised by the spanish speakers
- the word length had affected the digit span
- the study was done using spanish speakers only
- the study doesn't show at what age the
decrease might start