Search results for "Short-Term"

showing 10 items of 240 documents

Genome Wide Association Scan identifies new variants associated with a cognitive predictor of dyslexia

2018

AbstractDevelopmental dyslexia (DD) is one of the most prevalent learning disorders among children and is characterized by deficits in different cognitive skills, including reading, spelling, short term memory and others. To help unravel the genetic basis of these skills, we conducted a Genome Wide Association Study (GWAS), including nine cohorts of reading-impaired and typically developing children of European ancestry, recruited across different countries (N=2,562-3,468).We observed a genome-wide significant effect (p<1×10−8) on rapid automatized naming of letters (RANlet) for variants on 18q12.2 withinMIR924HG (micro-RNA 924 host gene;p= 4.73×10−9), and a suggestive association on 8q1…

0303 health sciencesmedia_common.quotation_subjectDyslexiaShort-term memoryGenomicsGenome-wide association studyCognitionmedicine.diseaseSpelling03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineReading (process)medicineCognitive skillPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgery030304 developmental biologyClinical psychologymedia_common
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Executive functions in kindergarten children at risk for developmental coordination disorder

2018

Executive functioning (EF) is a key cognitive process for development. Little is known about EF in Kindergarten children at risk for developmental coordination disorder (DCD), despite this age being one of the most critical and intensive period of motor and cognitive development. In our investigation we compared EF in kindergarten children at risk for DCD with Typically Developing (TD) children. Participants were 36 Italian children, 18 at risk for DCD (9 boys and 9 girls) who had a mean age of 4.6 years and 18 TD (9 boys and 9 girls) who had a mean age of 4.6. Executive functions were measured by tasks targeting cold executive functioning (working memory, fluency, inhibitory control) and t…

3304media_common.quotation_subjecteducationShort-term memoryDevelopmental Coordination Disorder; executive functioning; fluency; inhibitory Control; kindergarten; working memory; 3304; Health Professions (miscellaneous); Developmental and Educational PsychologyDevelopmental Coordination DisorderHealth Professions (miscellaneous)working memoryEducationDevelopmental psychologySettore M-PSI/04 - Psicologia Dello Sviluppo E Psicologia Dell'EducazioneDevelopmental and Educational Psychologykindergarten0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesfluencyAt-risk studentsmedia_commonPsychomotor learningWorking memory05 social sciences050301 educationCognitionSelf-controlinhibitory ControlExecutive functionsChild developmentPsychologyexecutive functioning0503 education050104 developmental & child psychologyEuropean Journal of Special Needs Education
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Acute stress and working memory in older people.

2015

Several studies have shown that acute stress affects working memory (WM) in young adults, but the effect in older people is understudied. As observed in other types of memory, older people may be less sensitive to acute effects of stress on WM. We performed two independent studies with healthy older men and women (from 55 to 77 years old) to investigate the effects of acute stress (Trier Social Stress Test; TSST) and cortisol on WM. In study 1 (n = 63), after the TSST women (but not men) improved their performance on Digit Span Forward (a measure of the memory span component of WM) but not on Digit Span Backward (a measure of both memory span and the executive component of WM). Furthermore,…

Acute effectsMaleendocrine systemmedicine.medical_specialtyHydrocortisonePhysiologyAudiologyDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral NeuroscienceTrier social stress testmedicineMemory spanHumansYoung adultAcute stressAssociation (psychology)SalivaSocial BehaviorAgedEndocrine and Autonomic SystemsWorking memoryMiddle AgedPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyMemory Short-TermSalivary alpha-AmylasesFemaleOlder peoplePsychologyStress PsychologicalStress (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
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Working memory structure and intellectual disability

2000

The working memory of people with intellectual disability has been found to generally lag behind their mental age. However, studies concerning the structure of working memory or its connections to other cognitive functions are rare. The present study employs a versatile battery of tests for the evaluation of working memory structure in adults with intellectual disability of unknown aetiology. In addition, connections between working memory and cognitive skills valid for everyday functioning are evaluated. Working memory performance in the study participants was found to stem from two distinct components which could be regarded to represent phonological and general working memory. General wo…

AdultAdolescentReconstructive memoryShort-term memoryNeuropsychological TestsSeverity of Illness Index050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Intellectual DisabilityMemory spanHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesCognitive skillChildMemory DisordersWorking memory05 social sciencesRehabilitationReproducibility of ResultsMiddle AgedAchievementPsychiatry and Mental healthCross-Sectional StudiesNeurologyChild PreschoolPopulation SurveillanceNeurology (clinical)Childhood memoryVerbal memoryCognition DisordersPsychologyCognitive loadFollow-Up Studies050104 developmental & child psychologyCognitive psychologyJournal of Intellectual Disability Research
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Tower of Hanoi and working memory in adult persons with intellectual disability

2001

Persons with intellectual disability (ID) have been found to perform more poorly than their mental age would suggest in the visuo-spatial problem solving task Tower of Hanoi (TOH). Inefficient performance has been assumed to be related to inability to use sophisticated problem solving strategies because of restricted working memory capacity. In the present study, the TOH performance of adult persons with ID was found to be equal to that of fluid-intelligence-matched general children. However, persons with ID violated the rules of the TOH more often, and needed more trials to solve the TOH problems than the children did. Visuo-spatial and executive working memory tasks were significantly con…

AdultIntelligence TestsMaleControlled attentionIntelligence quotientWorking memoryCognitive disorderShort-term memoryMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseTask (project management)Developmental psychologyClinical PsychologyMemoryIntellectual DisabilityIntellectual disabilityVisual PerceptionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumansFemalePsychologyMental ageResearch in Developmental Disabilities
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Working memory capacity affects trade-off between quality and quantity only when stimulus exposure duration is sufficient : Evidence for the two-phas…

2019

AbstractThe relation between visual working memory (VWM) capacity and attention has attracted much interest. In this study, we investigated the correlation between the participants’ VWM capacity and their ability to voluntarily trade off the precision and number of items remembered. The two-phase resource allocation model proposed by Ye et al. (2017) suggests that for a given set size, it takes a certain amount of consolidation time for an individual to control attention to adjust the VWM resources to trade off the precision and number. To verify whether trade-off ability varies across VWM capacity, we measured each individual’s VWM capacity and then conducted a colour recall task to examin…

AdultMale0301 basic medicinelcsh:MedicineStimulus (physiology)Positive correlationTrade-offArticleCorrelationvisual working memory03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHuman behaviourPhase modelHumansAttentionlcsh:ScienceMathematicsMultidisciplinaryRecallWorking memorylcsh:RWorking memorylaatukapasiteettityömuistiStimulus exposureMemory Short-Term030104 developmental biologyMental RecallVisual Perceptionlcsh:QFemale030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychology
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Smoking does not impact social and non-social cognition in patients with first episode psychosis.

2018

Abstract Background Many studies having shown significant improvements in non-social and social cognitive performance in smoking FEP patients compared to non-smoking FEP patients. The findings are controversial. This study analyzed the effects of tobacco use on non-social and social cognitive function in a large group of FEP patients and a matched healthy control group. Methods A sample of 335 patients with FEP and 253 healthy controls was divided into four subgroups: control tobacco users (CTU), control non-tobacco users (CNTU), patient tobacco users (PTU) and patient non-tobacco users (PNTU). Demographic variables, tobacco use variables (presence or absence, frequency and duration of toba…

AdultMaleAdolescent03 medical and health sciencesExecutive FunctionYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineCognitionSocial cognitionFirst episode psychosismedicineTobacco SmokingHumansLongitudinal StudiesProspective StudiesChildSocial BehaviorBiological PsychiatryWorking memorybusiness.industryCognitionTobacco Use DisorderExecutive functionsmedicine.disease030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthCross-Sectional StudiesMemory Short-TermPsychotic DisordersSchizophreniaFemalebusinessNeurocognitive030217 neurology & neurosurgerySocial cognitive theoryClinical psychologySchizophrenia research
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Disturbed brain activation during a working memory task in drug-naive adult patients with ADHD.

2010

Neuroimaging studies in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have shown abnormalities in several brain areas including the frontostriatal circuitry and were mostly conducted in children and adolescents. We investigated 30 never-medicated adult ADHD patients (16 males) and 30 matched healthy control individuals. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was acquired during a working memory paradigm (n-back). Group activation maps and group differences of activation were calculated using voxel-based analyses. The generic activation pattern was more extended in the control group. In ADHD patients, significantly decreased activation was found in the right inferior parietal cortex. Distur…

AdultMaleAdolescentCentral nervous systemPosterior parietal cortexYoung AdultNeuroimagingmental disordersmedicineAttention deficit hyperactivity disorderHumansMemory Disordersmedicine.diagnostic_testWorking memoryIllicit DrugsGeneral NeuroscienceBrainCognitionMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseDrug-naïvemedicine.anatomical_structureMemory Short-TermAttention Deficit Disorder with HyperactivityFemalePsychologyFunctional magnetic resonance imagingNeurosciencemedicine.drugNeuroreport
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Two systems of maintenance in verbal working memory: evidence from the word length effect.

2013

The extended time-based resource-sharing (TBRS) model suggested a working memory architecture in which an executive loop and a phonological loop could both support the maintenance of verbal information. The consequence of such a framework is that phonological effects known to impact the maintenance of verbal information, like the word length effect (WLE), should depend on the use of the phonological loop, but should disappear under the maintenance by the executive loop. In two previous studies, introducing concurrent articulation in complex span tasks barely affected WLE, contradicting the prediction from the TBRS model. The present study re-evaluated the WLE in a complex span task while co…

AdultMaleAdolescentCognitive NeuroscienceMnemonicsShort-term memorylcsh:MedicineSocial and Behavioral SciencesVerbal learningTask (project management)Young AdultMemoryHuman PerformancePsychologyHumansWorking Memorylcsh:ScienceBiologyBehaviorMultidisciplinaryRecallVerbal BehaviorWorking memorylcsh:RCognitive PsychologyExperimental PsychologyLinguisticsPhonologyVerbal LearningMental HealthMemory Short-TermMental RecallMedicineFemalelcsh:QBaddeley's model of working memoryAttention (Behavior)PsychologyArticulation (phonetics)Research ArticleNeuroscienceCognitive psychologyPLoS ONE
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Prismatic lenses shift time perception

2009

Previous studies have demonstrated the involvement of spatial codes in the representation of time and numbers. We took advantage of a well-known spatial modulation (prismatic adaptation) to test the hypothesis that the representation of time is spatially oriented from left to right, with smaller time intervals being represented to the left of larger time intervals. Healthy subjects performed a time-reproduction task and a time-bisection task, before and after leftward and rightward prismatic adaptation. Results showed that prismatic adaptation inducing a rightward orientation of spatial attention produced an overestimation of time intervals, whereas prismatic adaptation inducing a leftward…

AdultMaleAdolescentColor visionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlAdaptation (eye)Young AdultDiscrimination PsychologicalPerceptionOrientationSPACEHumansAttentionTime processingGeneral Psychologymedia_commonPerceptual DistortionSettore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia FisiologicaOrientation (computer vision)business.industryAdaptation OcularPattern recognitionTime perceptionShift timeTIMEMemory Short-TermPattern Recognition VisualTime PerceptionFemaleArtificial intelligenceSensory DeprivationPsychologybusinessColor PerceptionPsychomotor Performance
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