Working memory in very-low-birthweight children at the age of 11 years |
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Authors: | Satu Korpela Anna Nyman Petriina Munck Annarilla Ahtola Jaakko Matomäki Tapio Korhonen |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, University of Turku, Finland;2. Helsinki University Hospital, Child Neurology, Finland;3. Turku University Hospital, Child Neurology, Finland;4. Clinical Research Center, Turku University Hospital, Finland |
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Abstract: | The aim of this study is to investigate the working memory (WM) of very-low-birthweight (VLBW, ≤ 1500 g) children at the age of 11 years using Baddeley’s WM model. A regional cohort of 95 VLBW children was assessed for the domains of the WM model (central executive [CE], visuospatial sketchpad [VS], and phonological loop [PL]) using subtests from the Working Memory Test Battery for Children (WMTB-C) and the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children – Fourth Edition (WISC-IV). VLBW children were categorized into three groups according to their degree of brain pathology (normal, minor, or major) in neonatal brain magnetic resonance imaging at the term age, and the WM performance was compared between groups to test norms. The structure of the WM model was studied by analyzing correlations among domains. Even VLBW children with normal cognitive development (general ability index ≥ 85) performed worse compared to the test norms (M = 100, SD = 15) on CE (M = 87.64, SD = 20.54, p < .001) and VS (M = 91.65, SD = 11.03, p < .001), but their performance on PL was above the norm (M = 110.79, SD = 13.79, p < .001). VLBW children with major brain pathology performed significantly worse on VS and PL compared to the other groups. The correlations among the WM domains of the VLBW children differ from earlier findings in normative populations. To conclude, the WM of the VLBW children in the study differ—especially in the CE and VS subtest scores—from the normative population irrespective of the degree of brain pathology and level of cognitive development. |
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Keywords: | Working memory Preterm Phonological loop Central executive Visuospatial sketchpad Brain pathology Magnetic resonance imaging |
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