The relationship between executive functions and language production in 5-6-year-old children: Insights from working memory and storytelling

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Abstract

This study examined the relationship between working memory capacity and narrative abilities in 5-6-year-old children. 269 children were assessed on their visual and verbal working memory and performed in a story retelling and a story creation (based on a single picture and on a series of pictures) tasks. The stories were evaluated on their macrostructure and microstructure. The results revealed a significant relationship between both components (verbal and visual) of working memory and the global indicators of a story's macrostructure-such as semantic completeness, semantic adequacy, programming and narrative structure-and with the indicators of a story's microstructure, such as grammatical accuracy and number of syntagmas. Yet, this relationship was systematically stronger for verbal working memory, as compared to visual working memory, suggesting that a well-developed verbal working memory leads to lexically and grammatically more accurate language production in preschool children.

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Veraksa, A., Bukhalenkova, D., Kartushina, N., & Oshchepkova, E. (2020). The relationship between executive functions and language production in 5-6-year-old children: Insights from working memory and storytelling. Behavioral Sciences, 10(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/bs10020052

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