The phonological loop as a language learning device

Author(s): Baddeley A, Gathercole S, Papagno C

Abstract

A relatively simple model of the phonological loop (A. D. Baddeley, 1986), a component of working memory, has proved capable of accommodating a great deal of experimental evidence from normal adult participants, children, and neuropsychological patients. Until recently, however, the role of this subsystem in everyday cognitive activities was unclear. In this article the authors review studies of word learning by normal adults and children, neuropsychological patients, and special developmental populations, which provide evidence that the phonological loop plays a crucial role in learning the novel phonological forms of new words. The authors propose that the primary purpose for which the phonological loop evolved is to store unfamiliar sound patterns while more permanent memory records are being constructed. Its use in retaining sequences of familiar words is, it is argued, secondary.

Similar Articles

Slowed information processing in multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Litvan I, Grafman J, Vendrell P, Martinez JM

Processing speed interacts with working memory efficiency in multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Lengenfelder J, Bryant D, Diamond BJ, Kalmar JH, Moore NB, et al.

Compensatory cortical activation observed by fMRI during a cognitive task at the earliest stage of MS

Author(s): Audoin B, Ibarrola D, Ranjeva JP, Confort-Gouny S, Malikova I, et al.

Distinct mechanisms of altered brain activation in patients with multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Morgen K, Sammer G, Courtney SM, Wolters T, Melchior H, et al.

Cerebral activation patterns during working memory performance in multiple sclerosis using fMRI

Author(s): Chiaravalloti N, Hillary F, Ricker J, Christodoulou C, Kalnin AJ, et al.

Visual object recognition in multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Laatu S, Revonsuo A, Hämäläinen P, Ojanen V, Ruutiainen J

Evidence for a direct association between cortical atrophy and cognitive impairment in relapsing-remitting MS

Author(s): Morgen K, Sammer G, Courtney SM, Wolters T, Melchior H, et al.

Cognitive dysfunction in multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Rao SM, Leo GJ, Bernardin L, Unverzagt F

Early cognitive impairment in patients with clinically isolated syndrome suggestive of multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Feuillet L, Reuter F, Audoin B, Malikova I, Barrau K, et al.

Cognitive impairment in primary and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Wachowius U, Talley M, Silver N, Heinze HJ, Sailer M

Pattern of neuropsychological impairment in the early phase of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Olivares T, Nieto A, Sánchez MP, Wollmann T, Hernández MA, et al.

Cognitive deficits in multiple sclerosis correlate with changes in fronto-subcortical tracts

Author(s): Roca M, Torralva T, Meli F, Fiol M, Calcagno M, et al.

Cognition in the early stage of multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Schulz D, Kopp B, Kunkel A, Faiss JH

Information processing characteristics in subtypes of multiple sclerosis

Author(s): De Sonneville LM, Boringa JB, Reuling IE, Lazeron RH, Adèr HJ, et al.

Cognitive impairment as marker of diffuse brain abnormalities in early relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Deloire MS, Salort E, Bonnet M, Arimone Y, Boudineau M, et al.

Antisaccade performance in patients with multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Fielding J, Kilpatrick T, Millist L, White O

Processing speed versus working memory: contributions to an information-processing task in multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Genova HM, Lengenfelder J, Chiaravalloti ND, Moore NB, DeLuca J

Differences in cognitive impairment of relapsing remitting, secondary, and primary progressive MS

Author(s): Huijbregts SC, Kalkers NF, de Sonneville LM, de Groot V, Reuling IEW, et al.

Working memory impairment in early multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Pelosi L, Geesken JM, Holly M, Hayward M, Blumhardt LD

Event-related brain potential evidence for a verbal working memory deficit in multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Ruchkin DS, Grafman J, Krauss GL, Johnson R Jr, Canoune H, et al.

Subvocal articulatory rehearsal during verbal working memory in multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Sweet LH, Vanderhill SD, Jerskey BA, Gordon NM, Paul RH, et al.

The relative contributions of processing speed and cognitive load to working memory accuracy in multiple sclerosis

Author(s): Leavitt VM, Lengenfelder J, Moore NB, Chiaravalloti ND, DeLuca J

The impact of memory on age differences in digit symbol performance

Author(s): Erber JT, Botwinick J, Storandt M