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Use of verbal rehearsal is a key issue in memory development. However, we still lack detailed and triangulated information about the early development and the circumstances in which different forms of rehearsal are used. To further understand significant factors that affect children's use of various forms of rehearsal, the present study involving 108 primary school children adopted a multi-method approach. It combined a carefully chosen word length effect method with a self-paced presentation time method to obtain behavioural indicators of verbal rehearsal. In addition, subsequent trial-by-trial self-reports were gathered. Word length effects in recall suggested that phonological recoding (converting images to names - a necessary precursor for rehearsal) took place, with evidence of more rehearsal among children with higher performance levels. According to self-paced presentation times, cumulative rehearsal was the dominant form of rehearsal only for children with higher spans on difficult trials. The combined results of self-paced times and word length effects in recall suggest that "naming" as simple form of rehearsal was dominant for most children. Self-reports were in line with these conclusions. Additionally, children used a mixture of strategies with considerable intra-individual variability, yet strategy use was nevertheless linked to age as well as performance levels.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09658211.2018.1563615 | DOI Listing |
Hand Surg Rehabil
August 2025
Department of Hand Surgery, Strasbourg University Hospitals, FMTS, 1 avenue Molière, 67200 Strasbourg, France; ICube CNRS UMR7357, Strasbourg University, 2-4 rue Boussingault, 67000 Strasbourg, France. Electronic address:
Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of mental practice (MP) in improving procedural performance among surgical trainees learning to describe an ulnar shortening osteotomy using a non-biological simulator.
Methods: Fourteen level-1 and level-2 surgical residents were randomly assigned to a Naive Practice (NP) or Mental Practice (MP) group. All participants watched a standardized surgical video and performed three consecutive verbal descriptions of the procedure.
Memory
July 2025
School of Education, Language and Psychology, York St. John University, Lord Mayor's Walk, United Kingdom.
Verbal short-term memory (vSTM) draws on both phonological and lexical-semantic systems. This study examined whether vSTM support from semantic properties - specifically word imageability - varies with phonological ability and whether it endures rapid encoding conditions. Two auditory immediate serial recall (ISR) experiments tested recall for high - and low-imageability word lists in adults with and without developmental dyslexia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Behav
July 2025
School of Education, Anyang Normal University, Anyang, China.
Introduction: According to the multicomponent model of working memory (WM), the phonological loop serves to protect WM representations from interference through its phonological storage and rehearsal mechanisms, thereby enhancing performance on WM tasks. However, the neural mechanisms by which language knowledge facilitates WM remain unclear. The present study aims to explore how Chinese character features influence WM and to uncover the underlying mechanisms involved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Surg Educ
September 2025
Department of Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to assess the association of mental imagery ability with open suturing performance objectively.
Design: Participants completed a robust mental imagery assessment battery, mental imagery of simple interrupted suturing while verbalizing each step and having cortical activity measured with an electroencephalogram (EEG), and 2 physical repetitions of simple interrupted suturing. Correlation tests were run to determine relationships among variables.
PLoS One
May 2025
Neuroscience Program, Macalester College, Saint Paul, MN.
A growing amount of evidence highlights a role for the left hemisphere in negative facial expression processing. The present study investigated the extent to which language contributes to this left hemisphere involvement by comparing performance during an emotion detection task presented to the left and right hemispheres using divided visual field under conditions of verbal interference (covertly rehearsing a 6-digit string for a subsequent memory) and no interference. Participants were college undergraduates with no known neurological or psychiatric conditions.
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