Publication | Closed Access
Individual differences in executive processing predict susceptibility to interference in verbal working memory.
210
Citations
92
References
2006
Year
Verbal Working MemoryNeuropsychological FunctioningCognitive ScienceNeuropsychologyIndividual DifferencesCognitive VariableWorking MemoryMemoryCognitionInterference SusceptibilitySocial SciencesExecutive FunctionNeuroscienceAttentionCognitive NeurosciencePsychologyCognitive Factor
Recent theories have suggested that resistance to interference is a unifying principle of executive function and that individual differences in interference may be explained by executive function (M. J. Kane & R. W. Engle, 2002). Measures of executive function, memory, and perceptual speed were obtained from 121 older adults (ages 63-82). We used structural equation modeling to investigate the relationships of these constructs with interference in a working memory task. Executive function was best described as two related subcomponent processes: shifting and updating goal-relevant representations and inhibition of proactive interference. These subcomponents were distinct from verbal and visual memory and speed. Individual differences in interference susceptibility and recollection were best predicted by shifting and updating and by resistance to proactive interference, and variability in familiarity was predicted by resistance to proactive interference and speed.
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