The role of proactive interference in working memory training and transfer

被引:0
|
作者
Thomas S. Redick
Elizabeth A. Wiemers
Randall W. Engle
机构
[1] Purdue University,Department of Psychological Sciences
[2] Georgia Institute of Technology,undefined
来源
Psychological Research | 2020年 / 84卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent work on working memory training has produced conflicting results regarding the degree and generality of transfer to other cognitive processes. However, few studies have investigated possible mechanisms underlying transfer. The current study was designed to test the role of proactive interference in working memory training and transfer. Eighty-six young adults participated in a pretest–posttest design, with ten training sessions in between. In the two working memory training conditions, subjects performed an operation span task, with one condition requiring recall of letters on every trial (operation-letters), whereas the other condition alternated between letters, digits, and words as the to-be-remembered items across trials (operation-mix). These groups were compared to an active-control group (visual-search). Working memory, verbal fluency, and reading comprehension measures were administered in pretest and posttest sessions. All groups significantly increased their performance over the ten training sessions. There was evidence of strategy-specific benefits on transfer, such that transfer to working memory measures was higher for the operation-letters group on tasks specifically involving letters, and no differential transfer to working memory tests without letters, to verbal fluency, or to reading comprehension. The results indicate that proactive interference does not appear to play a causal role in determining transfer from working memory training, and instead a strategy account based on stimulus content provides a more parsimonious explanation for the pattern of training and transfer.
引用
收藏
页码:1635 / 1654
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Neural systems and time course of proactive interference in working memory
    Du, Yingchun
    Zhang, John X.
    Xiao, Zhuangwei
    Wu, Renhua
    2007 ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE IEEE ENGINEERING IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY SOCIETY, VOLS 1-16, 2007, : 1136 - +
  • [22] Immunity to proactive interference is not a property of the focus of attention in working memory
    Alicia Ralph
    Jade N. Walters
    Alison Stevens
    Kirra J. Fitzgerald
    Gerald Tehan
    Aimee M. Surprenant
    Ian Neath
    Josée Turcotte
    Memory & Cognition, 2011, 39 : 217 - 230
  • [23] Release from proactive interference in rat spatial working memory
    William A. Roberts
    Hayden MacDonald
    Lyn Brown
    Krista Macpherson
    Learning & Behavior, 2017, 45 : 263 - 275
  • [24] Is the Phonological Similarity Effect in Working Memory Due to Proactive Interference?
    Baddeley, Alan D.
    Hitch, Graham J.
    Quinlan, Philip T.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2018, 44 (08) : 1312 - 1316
  • [25] Individual differences in proactive interference in verbal and visuospatial working memory
    Lilienthal, Lindsey
    MEMORY, 2017, 25 (08) : 1110 - 1116
  • [26] Effects of proactive interference on non-verbal working memory
    Cyr, Marilyn
    Nee, Derek E.
    Nelson, Eric
    Senger, Thea
    Jonides, John
    Malapani, Chara
    COGNITIVE PROCESSING, 2017, 18 (01) : 1 - 12
  • [27] Release from proactive interference in rat spatial working memory
    Roberts, William A.
    MacDonald, Hayden
    Brown, Lyn
    Macpherson, Krista
    LEARNING & BEHAVIOR, 2017, 45 (03) : 263 - 275
  • [28] Training of resistance to proactive interference and working memory in older adults: a randomized double-blind study
    Loosli, Sandra V.
    Falquez, Rosalux
    Unterrainer, Josef M.
    Weiller, Cornelius
    Rahm, Benjamin
    Kaller, Christoph P.
    INTERNATIONAL PSYCHOGERIATRICS, 2016, 28 (03) : 453 - 467
  • [29] Understanding the Transfer Deficit: Contextual Mismatch, Proactive Interference, and Working Memory Affect Toddlers' Video-Based Transfer
    Choi, Koeun
    Kirkorian, Heather L.
    Pempek, Tiffany A.
    CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2018, 89 (04) : 1378 - 1393
  • [30] On the role of working memory in response interference
    Stins, JF
    Vosse, S
    Boomsma, DI
    De Geus, EJC
    PERCEPTUAL AND MOTOR SKILLS, 2004, 99 (03) : 947 - 958