Cognitive Predictors of Verbal Memory in a Mixed Clinical Pediatric Sample

Verbal memory problems, along with other cognitive difficulties, are common in children diagnosed with neurological and/or psychological disorders. Historically, these “memory problems” have been poorly characterized and often present with a heterogeneous pattern of performance across memory process...

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Main Authors: Shelley C. Heaton, Callie E. Tyner, Lizabeth L. Jordan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-08-01
Series:Behavioral Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/3/3/522
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spelling doaj-05527f6cdd0947948aae22fa093b23382020-11-24T23:17:57ZengMDPI AGBehavioral Sciences2076-328X2013-08-013352253510.3390/bs3030522Cognitive Predictors of Verbal Memory in a Mixed Clinical Pediatric SampleShelley C. HeatonCallie E. TynerLizabeth L. JordanVerbal memory problems, along with other cognitive difficulties, are common in children diagnosed with neurological and/or psychological disorders. Historically, these “memory problems” have been poorly characterized and often present with a heterogeneous pattern of performance across memory processes, even within a specific diagnostic group. The current study examined archival neuropsychological data from a large mixed clinical pediatric sample in order to understand whether functioning in other cognitive areas (i.e., verbal knowledge, attention, working memory, executive functioning) may explain some of the performance variability seen across verbal memory tasks of the Children’s Memory Scale (CMS). Multivariate analyses revealed that among the cognitive functions examined, only verbal knowledge explained a significant amount of variance in overall verbal memory performance. Further univariate analyses examining the component processes of verbal memory indicated that verbal knowledge is specifically related to encoding, but not the retention or retrieval stages. Future research is needed to replicate these findings in other clinical samples, to examine whether verbal knowledge predicts performance on other verbal memory tasks and to explore whether these findings also hold true for visual memory tasks. Successful replication of the current study findings would indicate that interventions targeting verbal encoding deficits should include efforts to improve verbal knowledge.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/3/3/522memorypediatric neuropsychologycognitive development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shelley C. Heaton
Callie E. Tyner
Lizabeth L. Jordan
spellingShingle Shelley C. Heaton
Callie E. Tyner
Lizabeth L. Jordan
Cognitive Predictors of Verbal Memory in a Mixed Clinical Pediatric Sample
Behavioral Sciences
memory
pediatric neuropsychology
cognitive development
author_facet Shelley C. Heaton
Callie E. Tyner
Lizabeth L. Jordan
author_sort Shelley C. Heaton
title Cognitive Predictors of Verbal Memory in a Mixed Clinical Pediatric Sample
title_short Cognitive Predictors of Verbal Memory in a Mixed Clinical Pediatric Sample
title_full Cognitive Predictors of Verbal Memory in a Mixed Clinical Pediatric Sample
title_fullStr Cognitive Predictors of Verbal Memory in a Mixed Clinical Pediatric Sample
title_full_unstemmed Cognitive Predictors of Verbal Memory in a Mixed Clinical Pediatric Sample
title_sort cognitive predictors of verbal memory in a mixed clinical pediatric sample
publisher MDPI AG
series Behavioral Sciences
issn 2076-328X
publishDate 2013-08-01
description Verbal memory problems, along with other cognitive difficulties, are common in children diagnosed with neurological and/or psychological disorders. Historically, these “memory problems” have been poorly characterized and often present with a heterogeneous pattern of performance across memory processes, even within a specific diagnostic group. The current study examined archival neuropsychological data from a large mixed clinical pediatric sample in order to understand whether functioning in other cognitive areas (i.e., verbal knowledge, attention, working memory, executive functioning) may explain some of the performance variability seen across verbal memory tasks of the Children’s Memory Scale (CMS). Multivariate analyses revealed that among the cognitive functions examined, only verbal knowledge explained a significant amount of variance in overall verbal memory performance. Further univariate analyses examining the component processes of verbal memory indicated that verbal knowledge is specifically related to encoding, but not the retention or retrieval stages. Future research is needed to replicate these findings in other clinical samples, to examine whether verbal knowledge predicts performance on other verbal memory tasks and to explore whether these findings also hold true for visual memory tasks. Successful replication of the current study findings would indicate that interventions targeting verbal encoding deficits should include efforts to improve verbal knowledge.
topic memory
pediatric neuropsychology
cognitive development
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/3/3/522
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AT lizabethljordan cognitivepredictorsofverbalmemoryinamixedclinicalpediatricsample
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