A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

The Pursuit of Effective Working Memory Training: a Pre-registered Randomised Controlled Trial with a Novel Varied Training Protocol




AuthorsRitakallio Liisa, Fellman Daniel, Jylkkä Jussi, Waris Otto, Lönnroth Nelly, Nervander Reidar, Salmi Juha, Laine Matti

PublisherSpringer

Publication year2022

Journal:Journal of Cognitive Enhancement

Volume6

Issue2

First page 232

Last page247

eISSN2509-3304

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s41465-021-00235-2

Web address https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41465-021-00235-2

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/68555866


Abstract

Working memory (WM) training, typically entailing repetitive practice with one or two tasks, has mostly yielded only limited task-specific transfer effects. We developed and tested a new WM training approach where the task paradigm, stimulus type, and predictability of the stimulus sequence were constantly altered during the 4-week training period. We expected that this varied training protocol would generate more extensive transfer by facilitating the use of more general strategies that could be applied to a range of WM tasks. Pre-post transfer effects following varied training (VT group, n = 60) were compared against traditional training (TT group, training a single adaptive WM task, n = 63), and active controls (AC, n = 65). As expected, TT evidenced strong task-specific near transfer as compared to AC. In turn, VT exhibited task-specific near transfer only on one of the measures, and only as compared to the TT group. Critically, no evidence for task-general near transfer or far transfer effects was observed. In sum, the present form of VT failed to demonstrate broader transfer. Nevertheless, as VT has met with success in other cognitive domains, future studies should probe if and how it would be possible to design WM training protocols that promote structural learning where common features of specific tasks would be identified and utilised when selecting strategies for novel memory tasks.


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