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Two Attentional Processes Subserving Working Memory Differentiate Gifted and Mainstream Students

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 14:56 authored by Janice Johnson, Steven J Howard, Juan Pascual-Leone
Two working memory (WM) measures were contrasted, to clarify the nature of advantages in gifted children's cognitive processing. It was predicted that cognitively gifted children would excel in WM tasks taxing mental attention (i.e., n-back) but not tasks supported by perceptual attention (i.e., self-ordered pointing, SOPT). Ninety-one children aged 9-10 and 13-14 years, in a gifted or mainstream classroom, received n-back and SOPT, plus measures of mental-attentional (M-) capacity, inhibition, and shifting. Older children generally scored higher than younger children. As predicted, gifted children outperformed mainstream peers on all tasks, except for SOPT. Results demonstrate the need to distinguish between mental and perceptual attention in measurement of WM.

History

Journal title

Journal of Cognition

Volume

7

Issue

1

Publisher website/DOI

Language

English

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