Work memory development dynamics in children aged 5 to 7 in a period of social isolation: The role of screen time and the number of children in the family
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Reduced growth rates of working memory in pre-school children during periods of social
isolation have previously been documented. However, the question of whether and how long
it takes children to compensate for these deficits has remained open. The present study examined
the longitudinal dynamics of verbal and visual working memory development in children
between the age of 5 and 7 inclusive, taking into account home environment factors
such as the duration of screen time during the pandemic and the number of children in the
family. Screen time during social isolation was reported to range from 2 to 44 hours per week.
The general pattern of development of verbal and visual working memory during this period
was a natural increase, independent of screen time and number of children in the family.
However, as the screen time increased, both the actual level of development of verbal working
memory at each diagnostic cut-off and the rate of its development as the child grew older
decreased. The most pronounced negative impact on verbal working memory development
from extended screen time was reported among only children in the family. Continued use of
digital devices led not just to a slower rate of development of verbal working memory, but to a
temporary regression of it. Children in this part of the sample were able to compensate for the
regression in verbal working memory development and catch up with their peers only after
returning to a systematic educational process in resumed kindergartens.
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Gavrilova M. N., Chichinina E. A. Work memory development dynamics in children aged 5 to 7 in a period of social isolation: The role of screen time and the number of children in the family. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Psychology, 2023, vol. 13, issue 3, pp. 396–410. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu16.2023.307 (In Russian)