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The effects of working memory training on working memory, self-regulation, and analogical reasoning of preschool children.

David TzurielTammy WeissGaby Kashy-Rosenbaum
Published in: The British journal of educational psychology (2024)
The findings confirm the effectiveness of a non-computerized WMT among kindergartners and support our four-pronged theoretical model. We also discuss earlier findings on far-transfer effects and educational implications. We suggest that future WM studies adopt the following: (1) the development of training methods that are theoretically anchored; (2) training procedures should not rely heavily on computerized exercises but can be adapted to group characteristics, educational settings and cost-effectiveness aspects; (3) varying the task characteristics and training strategies to stimulate task-intrinsic motivation; (4) identifying training strategies to produce cognitive improvements underlying WM; (5) intervention should target individuals in early development as much as possible; (6) development of training procedures that facilitate motivation; and (7) providing empirical evidence of far-transfer effects for WM training. The empirical evidence should link gains in WM capacity and achievements in academic and other life domains.
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • virtual reality
  • randomized controlled trial
  • systematic review
  • transcranial direct current stimulation
  • attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
  • clinical decision support