Improving Working Memory in Learning and Intellectual Disabilities

The last forty years of research have demonstrated that working memory (WM) is a key concept for understanding higher-order cognition. To give an example, WM is involved in reading comprehension, problem solving and reasoning, but also in a number of everyday life activities. It has a clear role in...

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Superior document:Frontiers Research Topics
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Year of Publication:2016
Language:English
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (156 p.)
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spelling Silvia Lanfranchi auth
Improving Working Memory in Learning and Intellectual Disabilities
Frontiers Media SA 2016
1 electronic resource (156 p.)
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Frontiers Research Topics
The last forty years of research have demonstrated that working memory (WM) is a key concept for understanding higher-order cognition. To give an example, WM is involved in reading comprehension, problem solving and reasoning, but also in a number of everyday life activities. It has a clear role in the case of atypical development too. For instance, numerous studies have shown an impairment in WM in individuals with learning disabilities (LD) or intellectual disabilities (ID); and several researchers have hypothesized that this can be linked to their difficulties in learning, cognition and everyday life. The latest challenge in the field concerns the trainability of WM. If it is a construct central to our understanding of cognition in typical and atypical development, then specific intervention to sustain WM performance might also promote changes in cognitive processes associated with WM. The idea that WM can be modified is debated, however, partly because of the theoretical implications of this view, and partly due to the generally contradictory results obtained so far. In fact, most studies converge in demonstrating specific effects of WM training, i.e. improvements in the trained tasks, but few transfer effects to allied cognitive processes are generally reported. It is worth noting that any maintenance effects (when investigated) are even more meagre. In addition, a number of methodological concerns have been raised in relation to the use of: 1. single tasks to assess the effects of a training program; 2. WM tasks differing from those used in the training to assess the effects of WM training; and 3. passive control groups. These and other crucial issues have so far prevented any conclusions from being drawn on the efficacy of WM training. Bearing in mind that the opportunity to train WM could have a huge impact in the educational and clinical settings, it seems fundamentally important to shed more light on the limits and potential of this line of research. The aim of the research discussed here is to generate new evidence on the feasibility of training WM in individuals with LD and ID. There are several questions that could be raised in this field. For a start, can WM be trained in this population? Are there some aspects of WM that can be trained more easily than others? Can a WM training reduce the impact of LD and ID on learning outcomes, and on everyday living? What kind of training program is best suited to the promotion of such changes?
English
Intellectual Disabilities
working memory training
ADHD
Adaptive training
school outcomes
transfer effects
executive functions
Learning disabilities
short-term memory
Maintenance effects
2-88919-897-9
Barbara Carretti auth
language English
format eBook
author Silvia Lanfranchi
spellingShingle Silvia Lanfranchi
Improving Working Memory in Learning and Intellectual Disabilities
Frontiers Research Topics
author_facet Silvia Lanfranchi
Barbara Carretti
author_variant s l sl
author2 Barbara Carretti
author2_variant b c bc
author_sort Silvia Lanfranchi
title Improving Working Memory in Learning and Intellectual Disabilities
title_full Improving Working Memory in Learning and Intellectual Disabilities
title_fullStr Improving Working Memory in Learning and Intellectual Disabilities
title_full_unstemmed Improving Working Memory in Learning and Intellectual Disabilities
title_auth Improving Working Memory in Learning and Intellectual Disabilities
title_new Improving Working Memory in Learning and Intellectual Disabilities
title_sort improving working memory in learning and intellectual disabilities
series Frontiers Research Topics
series2 Frontiers Research Topics
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2016
physical 1 electronic resource (156 p.)
isbn 2-88919-897-9
illustrated Not Illustrated
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