Journal of Intelligence (Aug 2023)

The Structure of Working Memory and Its Relationship with Intelligence in Japanese Children

  • Yoshifumi Ikeda,
  • Yosuke Kita,
  • Yuhei Oi,
  • Hideyuki Okuzumi,
  • Silvia Lanfranchi,
  • Francesca Pulina,
  • Irene Cristina Mammarella,
  • Katie Allen,
  • David Giofrè

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence11080167
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
p. 167

Abstract

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There is a host of research on the structure of working memory (WM) and its relationship with intelligence in adults, but only a few studies have involved children. In this paper, several different WM models were tested on 170 Japanese school children (from 7 years and 5 months to 11 years and 6 months). Results showed that a model distinguishing between modalities (i.e., verbal and spatial WM) fitted the data well and was therefore selected. Notably, a bi-factor model distinguishing between modalities, but also including a common WM factor, presented with a very good fit, but was less parsimonious. Subsequently, we tested the predictive power of the verbal and spatial WM factors on fluid and crystallized intelligence. Results indicated that the shared contribution of WM explained the largest portion of variance of fluid intelligence, with verbal and spatial WM independently explaining a residual portion of the variance. Concerning crystallized intelligence, however, verbal WM explained the largest portion of the variance, with the joint contribution of verbal and spatial WM explaining the residual part. The distinction between verbal and spatial WM could be important in clinical settings (e.g., children with atypical development might struggle selectively on some WM components) and in school settings (e.g., verbal and spatial WM might be differently implicated in mathematical achievement).

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