Investigating whether executive functioning, working memory capacity, & long-term memory can be improved by cognitive training

Previous research showed improved working memory through cognitive training. However, comparatively little is known about whether long-term memory can be improved by such training. Several cognitive processes, including working memory and executive function, subserve long-term memory functioning. T...

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主要作者: Lim, Ming Ze
其他作者: Shen Biing-Jiun
格式: Theses and Dissertations
語言:English
出版: 2016
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在線閱讀:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69038
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機構: Nanyang Technological University
語言: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-690382019-12-10T13:31:48Z Investigating whether executive functioning, working memory capacity, & long-term memory can be improved by cognitive training Lim, Ming Ze Shen Biing-Jiun School of Humanities and Social Sciences Michael Donald Patterson DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Experimental psychology Previous research showed improved working memory through cognitive training. However, comparatively little is known about whether long-term memory can be improved by such training. Several cognitive processes, including working memory and executive function, subserve long-term memory functioning. Thus, if the cognitive processes that subserve long-term memory could be improved via training, these should then lead to broad improvements in learning and episodic memory. To test for these predictions, a pilot study was first conducted to examine whether training using three different cognitive training conditions would improve performance in tasks measuring working memory, executive functions, reading comprehension, and long-term memory for text information respectively. Participants were assigned to one of three possible training conditions (dual n-back training, meditation training, and practicing retrieval) over 20 daily sessions. Preliminary data suggested that mindfulness and retrieval practice could lead to changes that improved participants' working memory capacity and reading comprehension. The pilot study also suggested ways to improve participants' training experiences and adherence. Subsequently, a second study was conducted by incorporating modifications to the training protocols and with a reduction of training duration (i.e., from 20 daily sessions to 14 daily sessions). Paired-sample t-tests indicated that two training regimes (i.e., daily meditation training and practicing retrieval) led to changes that improve participants’ ability to store and retrieve episodic information formed while reading text passages. Also, only the meditation group improved on working memory capacity. This thesis concluded that certain training programs could work in improving various aspects of cognition, as well as discussing the possible mechanisms and accounts for training-induced transfers. Master of Arts (HSS) 2016-09-26T07:40:46Z 2016-09-26T07:40:46Z 2016 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69038 en 85 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Experimental psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Experimental psychology
Lim, Ming Ze
Investigating whether executive functioning, working memory capacity, & long-term memory can be improved by cognitive training
description Previous research showed improved working memory through cognitive training. However, comparatively little is known about whether long-term memory can be improved by such training. Several cognitive processes, including working memory and executive function, subserve long-term memory functioning. Thus, if the cognitive processes that subserve long-term memory could be improved via training, these should then lead to broad improvements in learning and episodic memory. To test for these predictions, a pilot study was first conducted to examine whether training using three different cognitive training conditions would improve performance in tasks measuring working memory, executive functions, reading comprehension, and long-term memory for text information respectively. Participants were assigned to one of three possible training conditions (dual n-back training, meditation training, and practicing retrieval) over 20 daily sessions. Preliminary data suggested that mindfulness and retrieval practice could lead to changes that improved participants' working memory capacity and reading comprehension. The pilot study also suggested ways to improve participants' training experiences and adherence. Subsequently, a second study was conducted by incorporating modifications to the training protocols and with a reduction of training duration (i.e., from 20 daily sessions to 14 daily sessions). Paired-sample t-tests indicated that two training regimes (i.e., daily meditation training and practicing retrieval) led to changes that improve participants’ ability to store and retrieve episodic information formed while reading text passages. Also, only the meditation group improved on working memory capacity. This thesis concluded that certain training programs could work in improving various aspects of cognition, as well as discussing the possible mechanisms and accounts for training-induced transfers.
author2 Shen Biing-Jiun
author_facet Shen Biing-Jiun
Lim, Ming Ze
format Theses and Dissertations
author Lim, Ming Ze
author_sort Lim, Ming Ze
title Investigating whether executive functioning, working memory capacity, & long-term memory can be improved by cognitive training
title_short Investigating whether executive functioning, working memory capacity, & long-term memory can be improved by cognitive training
title_full Investigating whether executive functioning, working memory capacity, & long-term memory can be improved by cognitive training
title_fullStr Investigating whether executive functioning, working memory capacity, & long-term memory can be improved by cognitive training
title_full_unstemmed Investigating whether executive functioning, working memory capacity, & long-term memory can be improved by cognitive training
title_sort investigating whether executive functioning, working memory capacity, & long-term memory can be improved by cognitive training
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69038
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