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Review Gathercole – Development of short-term memory Cognitive approaches to the development of short-term memory Susan E. Gathercole The capacity to retain information for brief periods of time increases dramatically during the childhood years. The increases in temporary storage of speech-based material that take place in the period spanning the pre-school years and adolescence reflect complex changes in many of the different component processes, including perceptual analysis, construction and maintenance of a memory trace, retention of order information, rehearsal, retrieval and redintegration. Another crucial capacity that undergoes a similar striking development is complex working memory, the ability to manipulate and store material simultaneously. Possible sources of age-related changes in working memory include increases in processing efficiency and attentional capacity, and taskswitching. These two short-term memory systems might play significant but distinct roles in supporting the acquisition of knowledge and skills during childhood. Whereas phonological short-term memory is linked specifically with the learning of the phonological structures of new words, complex working memory appears to support processing and learning in a wide range of contexts, in both childhood and adulthood. I S.E. Gathercole is at the Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Bristol, 8 Woodland Road, Bristol, UK BS8 1TN. tel: +44 117 928 8449 fax: +44 117 928 8588 e-mail: sue.gathercole @bristol.ac.uk 410 n the course of our everyday activities, we often have to hold in mind relatively meaningless information for short periods of time. Common situations include remembering verbal material, such as a postcode, a telephone number or the spelling of an unfamiliar name for sufficiently long to be able to write it down, or carrying out complex arithmetic calculations that involve mental storage of the intermediate products of our computations. This flexible capacity to store and manipulate information, termed ‘short-term memory’ or ‘working memory’, is extremely important to our effective cognitive functioning. Holding information in memory in this way is effortful, attention-demanding and highly prone to failure, particularly when the information load or other cognitive demands placed on the rememberer are high. One of the most powerful factors influencing short-term memory capacity is age. The short-term memory abilities of children increase markedly up to adolescence, with typically a two- to three-fold expansion in memory capacity occurring between four and 14 years of age (see Box 1). Despite the degree of consistency in developmental functions across different measures, there is little compelling evidence from adult data that a single memory system underpins all aspects of short-term memory performance. Findings from behavioural studies of normal adults, from neuropsychological investigations of individuals with acquired brain damage, and from neuroimaging studies of regions of brain activity associated with different short-term memory tasks, indicate that anatomically and functionally distinct systems serve the temporary storage and rehearsal of phonological (verbal) and visuospatial material1,2. These storage-based memory systems have themselves been distinguished from more flexible capacities to engage in many storage, processing, inhibition, and retrieval processes in complex cognitive activities such as language comprehension, mental arithmetic, and reasoning3–5. These different components of short-term memory are associated with activity in different brain regions (Box 2). According to the Baddeley and Hitch model of working memory6, the storage of limited amounts of either verbal or visuospatial material is mediated by domain-specific ‘slave’ systems, the phonological loop7 and the visuospatial sketchpad8. The capacity to perform more complex memory activities that include a substantial processing component are ascribed to the central executive9, a limited capacity system responsible for several functions including the storage and retrieval of information, directing the flow of information through the short-term memory system as a whole, the control of action, and planning. There are several other significant theoretical perspectives on complex working memory, too. It has been variously characterized as (1) a system fuelled by a limited capacity resource that can be flexibly deployed to support either processing or storage3,10, (2) activated portions of long-term memory controlled by an attentional resource with inhibitory capabilities11,12, or (3) a short-term memory mechanism providing cue-based access to long-term working memory systems, which are organized around specialized retrieval 1364-6613/99/$ – see front matter © 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. Trends in Cognitive Sciences – Vol. 3, No. 11, PII: S1364-6613(99)01388-1 November 1999 Review Gathercole – Development of short-term memory Box 1. Measuring short-term memory capacity References a Gathercole, S.E. and Baddeley, A.D. (1996) The children’s test of non-word repetition, The Psychological Corporation, UK. b Gathercole, S.E. and Baddeley, A.D. (1996) The non-word memory test (available from the authors on request) c Isaacs, E.B. and Vargha-Khadem, F. (1989) Differential course of development of spatial and verbal memory span: a normative study Br. J. Dev. Psychol. 7, 377–380 d Siegel, L.S. (1994) Working memory and reading: a life-span perspective Int. J. Behav. Dev. 17, 109–124 e Gathercole, S.E. and Pickering, S.J. Assessment of working memory in six- and seven-year old children J. Educ. Psychol. (in press) f Wilson, J.T.L., Scott, J.H. and Power, K.G. (1987) Developmental differences in the span of visual memory for pattern Br. J. Dev. Psychol. 5, 249–255 g Diamond, A. et al. (1997) Prefrontal cortex cognitive deficits in children treated early and continuously for PKU Monogr. Soc. Res. Child Dev. 62 1.6 Performance (proportional score) A variety of methods have been devised to assess short-term memory capacity. Examples of some of those most commonly used with children are shown in Table I. In each case, the response involves recalling information presented for a brief period and that is not physically present at the time of recall. A common feature of many methods, which make them particularly suitable when working with children, is the use of a span procedure in which the amount of material to be remembered is increased over successive trials. This is typically achieved by progressively increasing the number of elements to be remembered until memory performance falls below a criterion level of accuracy. Memory span is then defined as the maximum amount of information that an individual can remember accurately. Changes in performance on some measures of short-term memory during childhood are shown in Fig. I, in which mean performance of each age group (on which data are available) is expressed as a proportion of mean performance of nine-year-old children. Each of these measures taps either phonological short-term memory, visuospatial short-term memory, or complex working memory (see main text for explanation of these terms). Generally, memory performance increases steeply up to eight years of age, and shows more gradual improvement thereafter to asymptotic levels at 11 or 12 years. The exception to this profile is listening span (Ref. d), a complex measure of working-memory span that shows a constant steep developmental slope extending up to 16 years of age. This indication that complex working memory may undergo a longer period of development than phonological and visuospatial short-term memory is consistent with the lengthy time course of the development of the frontal lobes, the principal brain region associated with complex working-memory capacities (discussed in Box 2). 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Age trends in Cognitive Sciences Fig. I. Performance on measures of short-term memory as a function of age. Mean performance of each age group is plotted as a proportion of mean performance of nine-year olds. Blue squares, digit span (phonological memory); red triangles, non-word repetition (phonological memory); open circles, forward digit span; green squares, Corsi blocks (visuospatial memory); yellow triangles, listening span (complex working memory); filled circles, backward digit span (complex working memory). All data are redrawn from the following: non-word repetition, Refs a,b; forward digit span, backward digit span, and Corsi blocks, Ref. c; listening span, Ref. d. Table I. Tasks commonly used to assess short-term memory (STM) abilities in children Type of STM Method Examples of stimulia Correct response Ref. Phonological Digit span 8…5…2 “8 … 5 … 2” c Recall of words chin … led … bag “chin … led … bag” e Nonword repetition woogalamic “woogalamic” a Visuospatial Pattern recall f (3) (1) Corsi blocks Working memory/ (3) (1) (2) Listening span executive processes Oranges live in water “no” Pigs have curly tails “yes … water, tails” Counting span Backward digit span Day/night Stroop (2) 9…2…5 c e “4,3” e “5,2,9” c “day” g a Stimuli printed in italics are either verbally presented or represent experimenter actions (arrows). Actions are pointing actions, with positions of correct pointing responses in sequence shown in parentheses where relevant to the task. 411 Trends in Cognitive Sciences – Vol. 3, No. 11, November 1999 Review Gathercole – Development of short-term memory Box 2. The neuroanatomy of short-term and working memory 4 6 9 3 5 1 2 46 43 41 8 7 40 10 45 47 11 39 19 18 44 52 38 17 22 42 21 37 19 underpinning the prefrontal cortex (Ref. f). Rather less is known about the possible developmental changes in the brain systems underpinning phonological and visuospatial short-term memory, and about non-inhibitory aspects of more complex working-memory capacities, such as retrieval and activation of information from long-term memory. (The development during infancy and childhood of the brain systems underpinning human memory is discussed further in Ref. g.) References a Kalat, J.W. (1995) Biological Psychology (5th edn), Brooks/Cole Publishing Co. b Elman, J.L. et al. (1998) Rethinking Innateness, MIT Press c Smith, E.E. and Jonides, J. (1998) Neuroimaging analyses of working memory Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 95, 12061–12068 20 trends in Cognitive Sciences Fig. I. Sagittal view of the adult brain, with Brodmann areas marked. The four major lobes are demarcated by colour: frontal (yellow), parietal (green), temporal (red), and occipital (blue). d O’Reilly, R., Braver, T.S. and Cohen, J.D. (1999) A biologically based computational model of working memory, in Models of Working Memory (Miyake, A. and Shah, P., eds), pp. 375–411, Cambridge University Press e Diamond, A. (1990) Developmental time course in human infants and infant monkeys, and the neural bases, of inhibitory control in reaching, in The Development The cerebral cortex is divided into four lobes: frontal (Fig. I, shown in yellow), parietal (green), temporal (red), and occipital (blue). The basic neuroanatomical structure of the child’s brain is in place at birth (Ref. a). Brain mass increases threefold to about 1000 g between birth and 12 months (the mass of the adult brain is 1200–1400 g), primarily as a consequence of the development of cortical structures. Adult levels of brain metabolism are attained by 10 months of age and increase beyond this, to maximum levels at four years of age, when they reach 150% of adult activity. Rates of metabolic change vary according to cortical region: activity in the temporal, parietal and occipital lobes reaches adult levels between three and six months of age, whereas frontal lobe metabolic activity increases, and structural development starts, later – at around nine months – and continues into early adolescence (Ref. b). Another key developmental feature is the rapid growth in the number of synaptic connections within and across the cortex, which peaks in the second year of life. From four years of age through to adolescence, there is a slow decline in both synaptic density and brain metabolism. Advances in neuroimaging techniques such as PET and functional MRI in recent years have led to the identification of distinct cortical brain structures underpinning the principal components of short-term and working memory in normal adults. The neuroanatomical loci of some of these components are summarized in Table I. The extent to which the neural circuitry of short-term memory in the adult brain corresponds to that of the developing child is not fully understood. Work by Diamond and colleagues has established that the relatively late development of the prefrontal cortex closely parallels the time course of inhibitory aspects of executive function, such as the ability to suppress prepotent responses (Ref. e). This group has also demonstrated marked deficits in executive capacities in children with impairments of the neurotransmitter system and Neural Bases of Higher Cognitive Functions (Diamond, A., ed.), Ann. New York Acad. Sci. 608, 394–426 f Diamond, A. et al. (1997) Prefrontal cortex cognitive deficits in children treated early and continuously for PKU Monogr. Soc. Res. Child Dev. 62 g Nelson, C.A. (1995) The ontogeny of human memory: a cognitive neuroscience perspective Dev. Psychol. 31 723–738 Table I. Regions of cortical activity associated with short-term memory Type of shortterm memory Cortical areas Hemisphere Brodmann areas Posterior paretial Broca’s area, premotor cortex, supplementary motor cortex Left Left Left 40 44, 6 6 Spatiald Storage Rehearsal Inferior prefrontal Anterior occipital, posterior parietal premotor cortex Right Right Right 47 19, 40 6 Working memory/ executive processesc,d Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex Left/ bilateral 9, 10, 44, 45, 46 Phonologicalc Storage Rehearsal structures13. Major issues that divide theorists include the domain-specificity of working memory14,15, and the extent to which capacity limitations arise from processing skills16 or other resources, such as controlled attention11. Each of the major domains of short-term memory shows a steep developmental function through childhood (Box 1). This article focusses on current debates and advances in understanding the development and everyday function of two of these aspects of short-term memory: phonological short-term memory and complex working memory. Developmental changes in phonological short-term memory Research on adult memory has identified many distinct processes involved in remembering verbal information over short periods of time (see Box 3). To pinpoint the source or sources of improved phonological memory performance with age, it is necessary to apply specialized empirical methods that allow the isolation of individual processes. Below, evidence is summarized for development in each of these specific short-term memory processes. Perceptual analysis The early processes of perceptual encoding of the speech signal must be successfully completed in order to yield a phonological memory trace. It has been suggested that developmental changes in performance on phonological memory measures may be indirect consequences of basic perceptual analytic abilities17,18. Subtle acoustic processing deficits do not, 412 Trends in Cognitive Sciences – Vol. 3, No. 11, November 1999 Gathercole – Development of short-term memory Review Box 3. What is involved in phonological short-term storage? The complexity of the short-term retention of phonological material is illustrated in Fig. I, which traces some of the various processes involved in recalling a three-digit sequence. These processes are described in more detail below. trieval process appears to be a rapid, serial scanning process (Ref. g). In order to retrieve items in the correct sequence, original temporal context may be reinstated to help retrieve associated item information (Ref. e). Acoustic storage The acoustic record of the most recent auditory speech item is stored in a sensory form that preserves its physical features, and is highly vulnerable to disruption by subsequent speech material (Ref. a). Redintegration Stored knowledge relating to the lexical, semantic and phonological properties of specific items and of the language more generally is used to reconstruct incomplete phonological traces in a process termed redintegration (Refs h,i). These reconstructive processes can occur either during storage or at retrieval. Phonological analysis and storage The phonological structure of the to-be-remembered material is analysed from the sensory signal via the processes of perceptual analysis and segmentation. The resulting phonological specification is stored in phonological short-term memory. Information is lost both during presentation and recall through decay and, possibly, interference (Refs b,c). Temporal order The temporal context of the memory items must be coded for accurate serial memory. Possible mechanisms for recording the sequence information to be associated with individual items include activation gradients that diminish for successive items in a sequence (Ref. d), dynamic item context that changes across time (Ref. e), and oscillators operating at different frequencies (Ref. f). References a Frankish, C.R. (1996) Auditory short-term memory and the perception of speech, in Models of Short-Term Memory (Gathercole, S.E., ed.), pp. 179–208, Psychology Press b Cowan, N. et al. (1992) The role of verbal output time in the effects of word length on immediate memory J. Mem. Lang. 31, 1–17 c Neath, I. and Nairne, J.S. (1995) Word length effects in immediate memory: overwriting trace-decay theory Psychonomic Bull. Rev. 2, 429–441 d Page, M.P.A. and Norris, D.G. (1998) The Primacy Model: a new model of immediate serial recall Psychol. Rev. 105, 761–781 e Burgess, N. and Hitch, G.J. (1992) Toward a network model of the articulatory loop J. Mem. Lang. 31, 429–460 f Brown, G.D.A. et al. The development of memory for serial order: a temporal- Rehearsal One way that phonological material can be maintained for longer periods within this system is via covert rehearsal, a serial process that appears to refresh the decaying phonological representations. contextual distinctiveness model Int. J. Psychol. (in press) g Cowan, N. et al. (1998) Two separate verbal processing rates contribute to shortterm memory span J. Exp. Psychol. Gen. 127, 141–160 h Hulme, C. et al. (1997) Word-frequency effects on short-term memory tasks: evidence for a redintegration process in immediate serial recall J. Exp. Psychol. Learn. Mem. Cognit. 23, 1217–1232 i Gathercole, S.E. et al. (1999) Phonotactic influences on short-term memory J. Exp. Psychol. Learn. Mem. Cognit. 25, 84–95 Presentation Spoken presentation Retrieval “eight … five … two” Acoustic traces Phonological traces /eIt/ /fiv/ /t u:/ /eIt/ /fiv/ /t u:/ /eI*/ /*i*/ /t u:/ Phonological traces (*information lost through decay or interference) trends in Cognitive Sciences Retrieval Stored information needs to be accurately retrieved. A crucial step in the re- Temporal context Rehearsal Serial access to phonological traces guided by reinstated temporal context /eIt/ /nin/ /t u:/ “eight … nine … two” Letters underlined reflect the use of stored knowledge to re-integrate incomplete traces Spoken output Fig. I. Some of the processes involved in recalling a three-item digit sequence. In this example, the phonological structure of each item in the auditory digit sequence 8, 5, 2 is successfully encoded in a memory trace, is associated with its temporal context (indicated by bi-directional arrows linking each trace to its temporal context, represented here as a moving clock face), and is accurately rehearsed. The traces are retrieved (right) by reinstating the original temporal context and accessing the associated phonological trace. By this point in time, however, some phonological information has been lost from the traces corresponding to two of the items (8 and 5), although the final item (2) is intact. The remaining partial information is sufficient to support the correct redintegration of the initial item (8) owing to its phonological redundancy within the possible stimulus set (it is the only single-digit number that commences with the vowel sound eI). However, the remaining vowel information in the trace for the middle list item (5) is incorrectly reconstructed as 9. The resulting recall attempt consists of correct recall of the first and last items, with an item error in the middle list position. 413 Trends in Cognitive Sciences – Vol. 3, No. 11, November 1999 Review Gathercole – Development of short-term memory however, appear to lie at the root of the very poor non-word repetition performance of at least one group, children with specific language impairment (SLI). In a twin study, Bishop et al. assessed the abilities of children with SLI to perform two tasks: non-word repetition, and the fine-grained temporal discrimination of brief tones19. The SLI group performed at low levels on both tasks. However, non-word repetition scores were not strongly associated with the temporal discrimination measures, and whereas the former measure yielded strong heritability estimates, the latter did not. Thus, in this population at least, early perceptual skills do not strongly constrain non-word repetition abilities. Sensory memory The presentation of auditory speech information results in two parallel, temporary memory traces, one sensory and one phonological in nature. Older children show some evidence of both increased capacity and persistence of auditory sensory memory20,21. Phonological storage The phonological features of memory items are represented in a form that is less vulnerable to overwriting than auditory sensory memory, but that nonetheless decays over a matter of seconds. According to the working-memory model6, these traces are held in the phonological short-term store component of the phonological loop, where they are subject to decay if unrehearsed7. It has been argued, alternatively, that interference rather than decay is the main mechanism for loss of information from temporary phonological storage22. Possible sources for developmental changes in phonological storage include changes in rates of decay and the quality of the encoding23. Memory for order It is necessary to retain the order as well as the content of individual items if a sequence of verbal items is to be recalled correctly. Pickering, Gathercole and Peaker found little evidence for differences in the retention of order information between five and eight years of age, although recall accuracy was substantially greater in the older age group24. Both groups showed similar profiles of serial-order errors, with migrations of items over short distances in the recall protocol predominating. Differences in order memory beyond eight years of age were, however, found in another unpublished study by McCormack et al. (cited in Ref. 25). Older children and adults produced relatively fewer movement errors than eight-year-olds, and order errors spanned shorter distances from the target position in these older age groups. Brown et al.25 simulated these developmental changes by increasing the effectiveness in older age groups of the learning context used to maintain serial-order information in an oscillator-based model of serial recall26. Subvocal rehearsal Children below about seven years of age do not spontaneously re-code visual stimuli into verbal form for temporary storage27, or actively rehearse auditory speech material28,29. After that age, however, a large component of the age-related change in memory span is closely linked to increases in the rate of subvocal articulation30. One explanation for this finding is that increased rehearsal rates lead to better prevention of decay of temporary memory traces, and hence to greater memory span31. Similarly, faster articulation rates might lead to decreased decay during spoken recall32. Retrieval Another rate-based process that might contribute to the developmental memory function is the rapid, serial retrieval of memory traces prior to output. Cowan et al. reported that estimates of retrieval rate based on pauses during recall accounted for substantial age-related variance in memory span in children aged between seven and 11 years, with older children showing faster rates30. Estimated rates of rehearsal and retrieval in this study were not associated with one another, and both were independently linked with memory span, indicating that age-related changes in immediate memory cannot be adequately explained in terms of an increase in a single rate of processing, as some authors have argued33,34. Redintegration The use of long-term knowledge to reconstruct partial phonological traces of long-term knowledge may become increasingly effective in older children35, although it is apparent that by six years of age, substantial reconstruction of partial memory traces is already taking place on the basis of both lexical and phonotactic information36. Further investigation of developmental changes in reconstructive memory processes is required to evaluate their precise contribution to age-related changes in memory span. Summary The substantial improvement in phonological storage capacities over the childhood years appears to have its origin in multiple component processes, many of which occur in parallel. The extent to which the sum of the individual sources of development identified so far can adequately capture the developmental changes observed at the global level of memory performance is, however, difficult to assess in the absence of a detailed model that specifies all key processes and their inter-relationships. One important approach that is likely to advance this more general understanding of shortterm memory development is the application of computational models of short-term memory function. Several computationally explicit accounts of immediate verbal memory have been advanced in recent years that have proved to be capable of accommodating core features of short-term memory performance37–39. The simulation of developmental changes in these models will provide a significant step towards integrating the detailed empirical evidence already available into a coherent and more complete theoretical framework of adult short-term memory and its developmental origins. Does phonological short-term memory support new word learning? Why do children need the capacity to store phonological material for short periods of time? And, given the sizeable differences across age groups and between individuals of the same age in phonological memory capacity, what are the consequences for a child with relatively weak phonological memory skills? One claim has been that phonological short-term 414 Trends in Cognitive Sciences – Vol. 3, No. 11, November 1999 Gathercole – Development of short-term memory A Phonological short-term memory Non-word repetition B Vocabulary growth Review Improved non-word repetition Segmented lexical representatives Phonological long-term memory trends in Cognitive Sciences Fig. 1. Two models of the processes underpinning non-word repetition performance. Thicker arrows denote stronger links between items. (A) In this model, phonological storage supports non-word repetition and long-term phonological learning. (B) An alternative model proposes that non-word repetition is indirectly boosted by vocabulary growth. storage plays a highly specific role in supporting the acquisition of new vocabulary, based on evidence that phonological memory skills are closely associated both with existing vocabulary knowledge and with the ease of acquiring new words in either native or foreign languages5,40–46. Consistent with this view, children with specific language impairment40, which is characterized by unexpectedly poor language learning, have severely impaired capacities for phonological short-term storage47. Particularly close links occur between the long-term phonological learning component of vocabulary acquisition and one task believed to tap phonological short-term memory, non-word repetition40. For example, Gathercole et al. assessed the non-word repetition and digit recall abilities of a large group of five-year-old children who were also tested on a range of standardized measures of vocabulary knowledge and four word learning tasks48. In three of the learning tasks, the child attempted to learn an association between unfamiliar phonological structures. In the remaining task, the association to be learned was between two words that were already familiar to the child. Non-word repetition scores were closely related to vocabulary scores (with correlation coefficients ranging from 0.51 to 0.60), to scores on the three non-word learning tasks (correlation coefficients ranging from 0.46 to 0.51), but not to the word-word learning task (correlation coefficient 0.16). Digit recall scores showed significant but generally weaker associations with the vocabulary measures. The causal basis of the link between non-word repetition and vocabulary knowledge has been the focus of considerable debate17. Two current accounts are presented in diagrammatic form in Fig. 1. According to one account (Fig. 1A), non-word repetition provides a more sensitive measure of phonological short-term memory capacity than measures such as digit recall, because of the absence of any stored lexical specification of the phonological structure of a non-word. As a result, the child cannot use long-term representations to supplement recall and has to rely largely on phonological shortterm memory49, possibly aided by some long-term phonotactic knowledge50. Thus, the relationship between non-word repetition and vocabulary knowledge arises principally because temporary phonological traces of spoken non-words are used as a basis for constructing stable long-term representations of the sound structures of familiar words, a process that typically occurs over many exposures to a new word40. An alternative view is that cognitive processes or mechanisms other than phonological short-term memory, such as the analytic procedures that extract a phonological description from the incoming acoustic speech signal, lie at the root of the link between non-word repetition and vocabulary learning. There are several findings that are consistent with this position: children who score poorly on non-word repetition show reduced brain responses to phonemic contrasts51, training in phonological awareness boosts both non-word repetition ability and phonological segmentation skills52, and vocabulary knowledge shares close links with phonological segmentation ability as well as non-word repetition skills17,41,53. On the basis of this evidence, Metsala has proposed that vocabulary growth may be the prime causal mechanism in the developmental relationship between phonological processing and phonological short-term memory measures (Fig. 1B)18. As vocabulary size increases during the early childhood years, the child shifts from relying on wholistic representations and analysis of familiar words towards a more analytic segmental approach that recognizes the phoneme as a basic unit of language54. Metsala argues that, via this process of lexical restructuring, ‘more segmented lexical representations will lead to better flexibility in arranging individual phonemes in new patterns and thus more robust representation of non-words’ (Ref. 18, p. 6). The debate concerning the dynamic basis of links between vocabulary knowledge and a range of phonological processing skills including short-term memory is difficult to resolve on the basis of developmental associations alone, owing to problems in identifying patterns of causality from correlational data. Interpretational ambiguity is further exacerbated by the overlap in processes involved in typical phonological segmentation and phonological short-term memory tasks. The impact of perceptual analysis on phonological short-term storage has already been considered. Equally, conventional phonological processing and segmentation tasks themselves place a substantial phonological storage burden upon the child. Thus, neither class of task purely reflects one or other set of processes. Using different experimental methodologies has provided a useful means of teasing apart the phonological processing from the phonological storage component of short-term memory. Variables known to disrupt the operation of phonological short-term memory (such as articulatory suppression, word length, and phonological similarity) have been shown to impair the phonological learning of non-words whilst leaving word–word learning relatively intact55,56. As these variables seem unlikely to influence the initial phonological processing 415 Trends in Cognitive Sciences – Vol. 3, No. 11, November 1999 Review Gathercole – Development of short-term memory of the memory items, this evidence favours model A over model B (Fig. 1). Summary Phonological short-term memory abilities in children show close links with their capacity to learn new words in the language, although the causal basis of the relationship is still open to debate. One view is that temporary phonological storage is a crucial step in the construction of stable long-term phonological representations of new words, so that phonological memory skills provide a crucial constraint in word learning. An alternative account is that the relationship between phonological memory and vocabulary learning is secondary, mediated by a more direct link between segmental analysis and the construction of the phonological lexicon. Disentangling associated from causal connections in developmental contexts is particularly difficult, as basic skills such as phonological segmentation and phonological memory are rarely dissociable from one another in normal development. Resolution of current theoretical conflicts may require shifts towards new experimental methods that allow different processes to be functionally distinguished, and towards the study of neuropathological cases in whom marked dissociations can be found. Developmental changes in complex working memory Two principal theoretical frameworks have been used to characterize the development of working memory. The major distinction between these frameworks is the extent to which, either the processing demands of specific activities, or a general capacity for controlling attention, are viewed as imposing the major constraint on working-memory capacity. Trade-off between processing and storage According to Daneman, Carpenter and their colleagues, working memory is fuelled by a limited-capacity processing resource that can be flexibly allocated to meet the processing and storage demands of complex cognitive activities3,10. Thus, in tasks in which processing and storage demands exceed the available capacity, there will be a trade-off between processing and storage activities: the greater the resource devoted to ongoing processing, the less will be available to dedicate to storing the products of processing activities. Using this framework, Case and colleagues proposed that during the childhood years, the total amount of processing resource available to support these activities remains constant but the efficiency of processing activities increases57. Thus, as the child grows older and becomes more skilled at processing and manipulating information, the amount of resource required to support processing decreases, and memory storage capacity increases. This singular view of memory development as reflecting different points in a trade-off function between processing and storage has recently been challenged by Towse, Hitch and Hutton58. They demonstrated that performance on complex working-memory tasks that tap several knowledge domains is strongly influenced by the time at which children must store items in short-term memory, with increased memory delay being associated with storage decrements. This feature of memory performance cannot readily be accommodated by a processing/storage trade-off account. Instead, it suggests that age-related changes in task-switching behaviour and in decay functions might be possible origins of the striking differences found in complex working-memory performance at different times in childhood. Controlled attention of the source of developmental differences Another conceptualization of complex working memory emphasizes selective attention rather than processing efficiency per se as the major constraint on task performance. Engle and colleagues have argued that working memory consists of domain-general controlled attention, which is applied to activated long-term memory structures, and which may be served by the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex11,12. Findings of close associations between estimates of working memory capacity for different domains of activity14 are consistent with this view that working memory performance is constrained by a single general factor rather than by processing expertise in a particular domain. Although this framework has primarily been developed and applied to the understanding of individual differences in complex working memory rather than to development, there is evidence for age-related changes in attention underpinning the improved working memory capacities of older children. Swanson conducted a large-scale study of individuals aged from six to 57 years, in which working memory performance was assessed under a variety of access, storage and processing conditions, for both verbal and visuospatial material59. The results showed that age-related changes in performance were not specific to either verbal or visuospatial domains, and were related to the memory access and storage demands of the activities rather than processing demands. Swanson argues on this basis that amount of activation of long-term structures changes with age, owing to increased availability of attentional resources as children grow older. It should be noted that the view that individual differences in complex working memory have their source in the capacity of general controlled attention rather than in more domain-specific processing and storage constraints is not uncontentious. Evidence from other research groups points to limitations in working memory capacity which are highly specific to particular knowledge and processing domains15. There is also concern about the extent to which contrasting verbal and visuospatial tasks used in some studies truly tap distinct underlying domains, and so have the power to test the domain-specificity of working memory. Summary Age-related changes in complex memory have been conceived principally as arising from changes, either in processing efficiency within a particular domain or in the capacity of controlled attention, in both cases based largely on correlational evidence. New experimental techniques for identifying highly specific processes contributing to complex memory span may provide an important step towards resolving these fundamental differences, and in pinpointing more precisely the origin of developmental changes. The role of working memory in cognitive development As complex working-memory tasks are typically devised to mimic the competing mental demands of many of our 416 Trends in Cognitive Sciences – Vol. 3, No. 11, November 1999 Gathercole – Development of short-term memory everyday activities, it is perhaps unsurprising that children’s performance on these tasks has been found to be related to attainments in many key intellectual domains as well as measures of general intelligence11. Some specific hypotheses concerning the contribution of working memory to the acquisition of skill and knowledge in some domains have, however, been explored and are summarized below. Working memory and arithmetic One possibility that has been widely entertained is that the development of mathematical ability is significantly constrained by working-memory capacity. The data, however, are not particularly conclusive. While it is certainly the case that working memory (as well as phonological short-term memory) can play a crucial role in supporting on-line mental arithmetic in both children and adults60,61, evidence that either system is crucial to the acquisition of arithmetic ability over the childhood period in general is far from consistent62,63. This might reflect the fact that whereas working memory is important for components of mathematical ability such as mental arithmetic, it may play a relatively minimal role in supporting the understanding of conceptual aspects of mathematics that are crucial at other points in a child’s mathematical education. Working memory and language comprehension Complex working memory and performance on tasks involving both the written and spoken comprehension of language show robust and consistent associations in both children and adults4,64. Recent evidence indicates that this is a genuine causal link rather than a simple association11. Individuals with good working-memory abilities are also particularly good at acquiring the conceptual aspects of vocabulary acquisition5,65; this contrasts with the specific links found between phonological short-term memory and the phonological aspects of vocabulary learning. Working memory and school achievement In addition to the apparent involvement of working memory in arithmetic processing and language comprehension across the life span, adult studies have established links between working-memory capacity and many intellectual abilities, including following directions, note-taking, writing, reasoning and complex learning11. Given the range of important everyday cognitive activities that appear to be constrained by working memory, it seems reasonable to suppose that children with severely compromised working-memory capacities will be educationally disadvantaged at school, experiencing a range of learning difficulties. There is recent evidence that this is indeed the case. Gathercole and Pickering found that measures of complex working memory (but not phonological short-term memory) were highly effective in identifying sixand seven-year-old children who were recognized by their schools as having special educational needs arising from learning difficulties, and also in discriminating children whose special needs were recognized more than a year after the memory assessment66. In addition to providing support for the contention that working memory is a key system in supporting learning in an educational context, these findings suggest that working-memory assessments might provide a Review valuable means of identifying children at present and future educational risk. Summary Working-memory capacity appears to constrain many different aspects of complex cognitive behaviour in both children and adults. While the specific role played by working memory in the acquisition during childhood of knowledge and skills in specific domains is not as yet fully understood, recent evidence suggests that poor working-memory capacity can severely compromise a child’s abilities to make normal educational progress. Conclusion The abilities to hold and manipulate information over short periods of time undergoes substantial changes through the childhood years, with estimates of maximum capacity almost trebling in the period between the pre-school years and early adolescence. Age-related changes in phonological short-term memory appear to reflect increased efficiency in a whole range of processes including the storage of item and order information, rehearsal, retrieval and reconstruction of memory traces. Changes during childhood in complex working memory, on the other hand, have been attributed both to gains in the efficiency of processing and to increased attentional capacity in older children. The two temporary memory systems can be further distinguished by the roles they play in supporting the acquisition of knowledge and skills. Whereas phonological shortterm storage appears to be a crucial step in learning the phonological forms of new words, complex working-memory skills appear to constrain achievement in a whole range of learning domains including mathematics and language. Outstanding questions • Is there actually a functionally distinct system or set of systems serving short-term memory? Some argue that temporary representations that support performance on immediate memory tasks merely reflect persistence of products within highly specific processing domains, such as phonological processing. On this view, developmental changes in memory performance through childhood arise from changes in the detailed nature of the processing domains themselves rather than in ‘short-term memory’. Neuropsychological dissociations between processing and short-term memory nevertheless provide substantial justification for the assumption of distinct storage mechanisms with different neuroanatomical architectures. • Computational models of short-term memory have been developed in recent years that effectively simulate a wide range of key empirical phenomena in adult short-term memory. Can we build much-needed models of the development of short-term memory in order to provide impetus to both theorizing and empirical investigation of short-term memory during childhood? • Visuospatial short-term memory appears to represent a distinct system, but as yet relatively little is known about the ways in which adult capacities to store and manipulate such non-verbal material emerge across the childhood period. • Neuroimaging techniques are currently being effectively applied to chart the neuroanatomy of the brain systems underpinning the major components of short-term memory in adults. 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(in press) The role of gesture in communication and thinking Susan Goldin-Meadow People move their hands as they talk – they gesture. Gesturing is a robust phenomenon, found across cultures, ages, and tasks. Gesture is even found in individuals blind from birth. But what purpose, if any, does gesture serve? In this review, I begin by examining gesture when it stands on its own, substituting for speech and clearly serving a communicative function. When called upon to carry the full burden of communication, gesture assumes a language-like form, with structure at word and sentence levels. However, when produced along with speech, gesture assumes a different form – it becomes imagistic and analog. Despite its form, the gesture that accompanies speech also communicates. Trained coders can glean substantive information from gesture – information that is not always identical to that gleaned from speech. Gesture can thus serve as a research tool, shedding light on speakers’ unspoken thoughts. The controversial question is whether gesture conveys information to listeners not trained to read them. Do spontaneous gestures communicate to ordinary listeners? Or might they be produced only for speakers themselves? I suggest these are not mutually exclusive functions – gesture serves as both a tool for communication for listeners, and a tool for thinking for speakers. P eople gesture. This phenomenon has been remarked upon for at least 2000 years, across domains as diverse as philosophy, rhetoric, theater, divinity and language. The gestures that are most salient to speakers, and to listeners, are the codified (or conventionalized) forms that can substitute for speech. There is, however, another type of gesture that people routinely produce – informal, non-codified hand movements, fleetingly generated during the course of speaking. The content of these gestures is not typically the object of public scrutiny. As a result, these speech-accompanying gestures have the potential to reflect thoughts that may themselves be relatively unexamined by both speaker and listener. This type of gesture may thus reveal aspects of thought that are not seen in other, more codified forms of communication. In this review, I examine both types of gestures – those that substitute for speech, and those that accompany speech – with an eye towards understanding the role each plays in communication. Gestures that substitute for speech Gestures that have meaning independent of speech, and can occur on their own without speech, are known as ‘emblems’1. Emblems have standards of form and can clearly be ‘mispronounced’. For example, imagine producing the North American ‘okay’ gesture with the pinkie rather than the index finger touching the thumb – the resulting handshape is not recognizable as an ‘okay’. For the most part, emblems are 1364-6613/99/$ – see front matter © 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. PII: S1364-6613(99)01397-2 Trends in Cognitive Sciences – Vol. 3, No. 11, November 1999 Susan GoldinMeadow is at the Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, 5730 South Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637, USA. tel: +1 773 702 2585 fax: +1 773 702 0320 e-mail: sgsg@ccp. uchicago.edu 419