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Working Memory Capacity and Time Course of Predictive Inferences
Authors:Adelina Estevez  Manuel G. Calvo
Affiliation:1. Rank Xerox EuroPARC , Cambridge, UK;2. Rank Xerox EuroPARC , 61 Regent Street, Cambridge, CB2 1AB, UK;3. MRC Applied Psychology Unit , Cambridge, UK
Abstract:A naming task assessed activation of inference concepts during reading. A predicting, or a control, context sentence was followed by a target word to be named, which represented the predicted event or an inconsistent event. The interval between the end of the context and the onset of the target word varied between 50 and 1050-msec. Individual differences in working memory capacity were assessed by the reading span task. As reflected by facilitation in naming latencies in the predicting condition, relative to the control condition, (a) inferences were not made within the first 50-msec after the context, regardless of reading span; (b) only the high-span participants drew inferences within a 550-msec interval; and, (c) both the high-and the low-span participants generated them within a 1050-msec interval. These results indicate that high working memory capacity accelerates the time course of predictive inferences, although they do not become automatic. We propose that this effect occurs because these inferences involve time-consuming elaborations that place demands on the effortful and limited resources of working memory. Deficiencies in word knowledge, speed of lexical access, or comprehension of explicit information do not account for low-span readers' difficulties in generating predictive inferences.
Keywords:
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