Artigo Revisado por pares

The effects of symmetry and contour on recognition memory in children

1981; Elsevier BV; Volume: 32; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0022-0965(81)90103-x

ISSN

1096-0457

Autores

Morton J. Mendelson, Siu Ping Lee,

Tópico(s)

Cognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skills

Resumo

Abstract Children in prekindergarten, kindergarten, and second grade were tested on a delayed match-to-sample task using abstract visual patterns. The patterns varied both in type of visual organization (unstructured, diagonally symmetrical, vertically symmetrical, and horizontally symmetrical) and in amount of contour. Following the initial memory task, we attempted to train half of the children at each grade by directing their attention to axes of symmetry; the other half of the children received a control task. Subsequently, the subjects were given a second delayed match-to-sample test. On both pre- and post-training trials, structure influenced performance, especially in the two younger groups. Vertical and horizontal symmetry generally facilitated performance in the prekindergarteners, while all three types of symmetry facilitated performance in the kindergarteners. In addition, children generally responded more accurately to patterns with lower levels of contour. They also made more like-contour than unlike-contour confusions, indicating that quantitative aspects of patterns were encoded. Group differences suggested that both processing capacity and memory increase during the age range studied. Finally, there was no indication that training improved performance at any age.

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