Strategy use in the reading span test: An analysis of eye movements and reported encoding strategies




Kaakinen JK, Hyona J

PublisherPSYCHOLOGY PRESS

2007

Memory

MEMORY

MEMORY

15

6

634

646

13

0965-8211

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/09658210701457096



Strategy use in the traditional reading span test was examined by recording participants' eye movements during the task (Experiment 1) and by interviewing participants about their strategy use (Experiment 2). In Experiment 1, no differences between individuals with a low, medium, and high span were observed in how they distributed processing time between task elements. In all three groups, fixation times on words up to the to-be-remembered (TBR) word became shorter and the time spent on the TBR longer as memory load in the task increased. The results of Experiment 2, however, show that span groups differ in the use of memory encoding strategies: individuals with a low span use mainly rehearsal, whereas individuals with a high span use almost exclusively semantic elaboration. The results indicate that the use of elaborative strategies may enhance span performance but that not all individuals are necessarily able to use such strategies efficiently.



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