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The Journal of Genetic Psychology

Research and Theory on Human Development
Volume 171, 2010 - Issue 1
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ARTICLES

Encoding Strategies in Primary School Children: Insights From an Eye-Tracking Approach and the Role of Individual Differences in Attentional Control

, &
Pages 1-21
Received 17 Sep 2008
Accepted 01 Mar 2009
Published online: 07 Aug 2010

ABSTRACT

The authors explored different aspects of encoding strategy use in primary school children by including (a) an encoding strategy task in which children's encoding strategy use was recorded through a remote eye-tracking device and, later, free recall and recognition for target items was assessed; and (b) tasks measuring resistance to interference (flanker task) and inhibition of attention to task-irrelevant stimuli (distractibility). Results revealed that the ability to inhibit distraction and resist interference undergoes developmental changes between the ages of 7–10 years. At the same time, children's capability to strategically focus on task-relevant aspects also continues to improve in primary school years. Although there were substantial relationships between encoding strategies and later recognition, encoding strategies appeared to be unrelated to basic aspects of attentional control.

Acknowledgments

The study was partially financed by a grant of the Swiss Science Foundation (SNF—Grant No. 100014–112492) to Claudia M. Roebers. The authors wish to thank the participating teachers, children, and their parents for their cooperation and participation. They also gratefully acknowledge Saskia Krebs’ help with the data collection. Thanks are also due to the Tobii Technology support team for their technical assistance.

Notes

1. Significant sex differences were found only for gaze time spent on the targets and the nontargets (with girls looking longer at the targets and boys looking longer at the nontargets) and for the false alarm rate of the distractibility task (fewer false alarms in girls than in boys, but only in trials without a distractor).

 

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