Psico-USF (Aug 2016)

Performance of Children in Phonemic and Semantic Verbal Fluency Tasks

  • Gilmara de Lucena Leite,
  • Izabel Augusta Hazin Pires,
  • Laura Carolina Lemos Aragão,
  • Artemis Paiva de Paula,
  • Ediana Rossely de Oliveira Gomes,
  • Danielle Garcia,
  • Priscila Magalhães Barros,
  • João Carlos Nascimento de Alencar,
  • Helenice Charchat Fichman,
  • Rosinda Martins Oliveira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1413-82712016210207
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 2
pp. 293 – 304

Abstract

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Abstract This study investigated the performance of children from the Brazilian Northeast region, from 7 to 10 years in phonemic and semantic verbal fluency tasks. The participants were 102 subjects (62 girls and 40 boys) who performed three phonemic and three semantic fluency tasks. The results were submitted to correlational and variance analysis to investigate the influence of the variables age and gender on the subjects performance. There was no effect of gender on the results. Significant contrasts between age groups were found, and better performance was observed on phonemic tasks. Also, the performance in this task changed along development, in contrast to what happened with the semantic fluency. The findings seem to be in accordance to neurodevelopmental aspects, taken into account that explicit memory systems show more precocious maturational course, with earlier consolidation, in comparison to the executive functions and frontal lobes, which go on developing until adult ages.

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