Representational constraints on the development of memory and metamemory: a developmental-representational theory.

Stephen J Ceci, Stanka A Fitneva, Wendy M Williams
Author Information
  1. Stephen J Ceci: Department of Human Development, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA. sjc9@cornell.edu

Abstract

Traditional accounts of memory development suggest that maturation of prefrontal cortex (PFC) enables efficient metamemory, which enhances memory. An alternative theory is described, in which changes in early memory and metamemory are mediated by representational changes, independent of PFC maturation. In a pilot study and Experiment 1, younger children failed to recognize previously presented pictures, yet the children could identify the context in which they occurred, suggesting these failures resulted from inefficient metamemory. Older children seldom exhibited such failure. Experiment 2 established that this was not due to retrieval-time recoding. Experiment 3 suggested that young children's representation of a picture's attributes explained their metamemory failure. Experiment 4 demonstrated that metamemory is age-invariant when representational quality is controlled: When stimuli were equivalently represented, age differences in memory and metamemory declined. These findings do not support the traditional view that as children develop, neural maturation permits more efficient monitoring, which leads to improved memory. These findings support a theory based on developmental-representational synthesis, in which constraints on metamemory are independent of neurological development; representational features drive early memory to a greater extent than previously acknowledged, suggesting that neural maturation has been overimputed as a source of early metamemory and memory failure.

MeSH Term

Child
Child Development
Humans
Memory
Pilot Projects
Prefrontal Cortex
Psychological Theory

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0memorymetamemorymaturationExperimentchildrendevelopmenttheoryearlyrepresentationalfailurePFCefficientchangesindependentpreviouslysuggestingfindingssupportneuraldevelopmental-representationalconstraintsTraditionalaccountssuggestprefrontalcortexenablesenhancesalternativedescribedmediatedpilotstudy1youngerfailedrecognizepresentedpicturesyetidentifycontextoccurredfailuresresultedinefficientOlderseldomexhibited2establisheddueretrieval-timerecoding3suggestedyoungchildren'srepresentationpicture'sattributesexplained4demonstratedage-invariantqualitycontrolled:stimuliequivalentlyrepresentedagedifferencesdeclinedtraditionalviewdeveloppermitsmonitoringleadsimprovedbasedsynthesisneurologicalfeaturesdrivegreaterextentacknowledgedoverimputedsourceRepresentationalmetamemory:

Similar Articles

Cited By