Effects of concreteness and representation mode (kanji/hiragana) of target words on working memory during reading was tested using Japanese version of reading span test (RST), developed by Osaka and Osaka (1994). Concreteness and familiarity of target words and difficulty of sentences were carefully controlled. The words with high concreteness resulted in significantly higher RST scores, which suggests the high efficiency of working memory in processing these words. The results suggest that high concrete noun-words associated with visual clues consume less working memory capacity during reading. The effect of representation mode is different between subjects with high-RST and low-RST scores. Characteristic of the high concrete words that may be responsible for the effectiveness of processing are discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Kondo, H., & Osaka, N. (2000). Effect of concreteness of target words on verbal working memory: An evaluation using Japanese version of reading span test. Japanese Journal of Psychology, 71(1), 51–56. https://doi.org/10.4992/jjpsy.71.51
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