Child Development Clinical Trial
Official title:
Training Parents in an Elaborative Reminiscing Style to Boost Preschoolers' Development of Memory and Metacognition: A Randomized Controlled Study
Verified date | August 2021 |
Source | University of Liege |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
This randomized controlled study aims to investigate the effects of an intervention targeting parental reminiscing style on preschoolers' memory (i.e., episodic and autobiographical) and metacognition (i.e., confidence judgment and memorability-based heuristic).
Status | Active, not recruiting |
Enrollment | 40 |
Est. completion date | January 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | January 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 36 Months to 71 Months |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Children: French as mother tong - Parent : be the parent who talks the most with the child (if both parents speak equally, the choice of the participating parent is left to them) Exclusion Criteria: - Children: major cognitive or language difficulties at the time of the study and attested by a neuropsychological or language assessment - Children: actual medication that may lead to cognitive difficulties |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Belgium | University of Liege | Liège |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Liege |
Belgium,
Bornstein MH, Putnick DL, Suwalsky JTD. Parenting cognitions ? parenting practices ? child adjustment? The standard model. Dev Psychopathol. 2018 May;30(2):399-416. doi: 10.1017/S0954579417000931. Epub 2017 Jun 19. — View Citation
Corsano P, Guidotti L. Parents' reminiscing training in typically developing and 'at-risk' children: a review. Early Child Dev Care. 2019; 189(1): 143-156. doin: 10.1080/03004430.2017.1289518
Geurten M, Bastin C. Behaviors speak louder than explicit reports: Implicit metacognition in 2.5-year-old children. Dev Sci. 2019 Mar;22(2):e12742. doi: 10.1111/desc.12742. Epub 2018 Sep 19. — View Citation
Langley HA, Coffman JL, Ornstein PA. The Socialization of Children's Memory: Linking Maternal Conversational Style to the Development of Children's Autobiographical and Deliberate Memory Skills. J Cogn Dev. 2017;18(1):63-86. doi: 10.1080/15248372.2015.1135800. Epub 2016 Sep 10. — View Citation
Rudek DJ, Haden CA. Mothers' and Preschoolers' Mental State Language During Reminiscing Over Time. Merrill Palmer Q. 2005;51(4):557-583. doi: 10.1353/mpq.2005.0026
Waters TEA, Camia C, Facompré CR, Fivush R. A meta-analytic examination of maternal reminiscing style: Elaboration, gender, and children's cognitive development. Psychol Bull. 2019 Nov;145(11):1082-1102. doi: 10.1037/bul0000211. — View Citation
Wu Y, Jobson L. Maternal reminiscing and child autobiographical memory elaboration: A meta-analytic review. Dev Psychol. 2019 Dec;55(12):2505-2521. doi: 10.1037/dev0000821. Epub 2019 Sep 19. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Parents' perception of reminiscing with their child (exploratory) | The first 5 words that come to parents' mind when they think about the discussions they have with their child about school days. Index : the mean of valence of words (i.e., negative, neutral, positive) assessed by external judges. | Group 1 : Baseline 1 (1 week before intervention) | |
Other | Parents' perception of reminiscing with their child (exploratory) | The first 5 words that come to parents' mind when they think about the discussions they have with their child about school days. Index : the mean of valence of words (i.e., negative, neutral, positive) assessed by external judges. | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Other | Parents' perception of reminiscing with their child (exploratory) | The first 5 words that come to parents' mind when they think about the discussions they have with their child about school days. Index : the mean of valence of words (i.e., negative, neutral, positive) assessed by external judges. | Group 1 : Follow-up 2 (6 months after the intervention) | |
Other | Parents' perception of reminiscing with their child (exploratory) | The first 5 words that come to parents' mind when they think about the discussions they have with their child about school days. Index : the mean of valence of words (i.e., negative, neutral, positive) assessed by external judges. | Group 2 : Baseline 1 (10 weeks before the intervention) | |
Other | Parents' perception of reminiscing with their child (exploratory) | The first 5 words that come to parents' mind when they think about the discussions they have with their child about school days. Index : the mean of valence of words (i.e., negative, neutral, positive) assessed by external judges. | Group 2 : Baseline 2 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Other | Parents' perception of reminiscing with their child (exploratory) | The first 5 words that come to parents' mind when they think about the discussions they have with their child about school days. Index : the mean of valence of words (i.e., negative, neutral, positive) assessed by external judges. | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Other | Parenting cognitions (exploratory) | Assessment of parenting cognitions as defined by Bornstein et al. (2018) through visual analogue scales (e.g., parental self-efficacy, parental satisfaction, parenting knowledge, ...). Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 1 : Baseline 1 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Other | Parenting cognitions (exploratory) | Assessment of parenting cognitions as defined by Bornstein et al. (2018) through visual analogue scales (e.g., parental self-efficacy, parental satisfaction, parenting knowledge, ...). Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Other | Parenting cognitions (exploratory) | Assessment of parenting cognitions as defined by Bornstein et al. (2018) through visual analogue scales (e.g., parental self-efficacy, parental satisfaction, parenting knowledge, ...). Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 1 : Follow-up 2 (6 months after the intervention) | |
Other | Parenting cognitions (exploratory) | Assessment of parenting cognitions as defined by Bornstein et al. (2018) through visual analogue scales (e.g., parental self-efficacy, parental satisfaction, parenting knowledge, ...). Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 2 : Baseline 1 (10 weeks before the intervention) | |
Other | Parenting cognitions (exploratory) | Assessment of parenting cognitions as defined by Bornstein et al. (2018) through visual analogue scales (e.g., parental self-efficacy, parental satisfaction, parenting knowledge, ...). Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 2 : Baseline 2 (2 weeks before the intervention) | |
Other | Parenting cognitions (exploratory) | Assessment of parenting cognitions as defined by Bornstein et al. (2018) through visual analogue scales (e.g., parental self-efficacy, parental satisfaction, parenting knowledge, ...). Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Other | Parents' general feeling (exploratory) | Visual analogue scales about parents' level of anxiety, depression, irritability and life satisfaction. Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 1 : Baseline 1 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Other | Parents' general feeling (exploratory) | Visual analogue scales about parents' level of anxiety, depression, irritability and life satisfaction. Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Other | Parents' general feeling (exploratory) | Visual analogue scales about parents' level of anxiety, depression, irritability and life satisfaction. Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 1 : Follow-up 2 (6 months after the intervention) | |
Other | Parents' general feeling (exploratory) | Visual analogue scales about parents' level of anxiety, depression, irritability and life satisfaction. Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 2 : Baseline 1 (10 weeks before the intervention) | |
Other | Parents' general feeling (exploratory) | Visual analogue scales about parents' level of anxiety, depression, irritability and life satisfaction. Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 2 : Baseline 2 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Other | Parents' general feeling (exploratory) | Visual analogue scales about parents' level of anxiety, depression, irritability and life satisfaction. Index : position on visual analogue scales (from 0 to 10). | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Other | Feasibility and adherence of the intervention (exploratory) | Online questionnaire in the form of visual analogue scales (e.g., measure of the degree of ease with which the parents apply the target behaviors in daily life) and open-ended questions (e.g., barriers to the daily use of the target behaviors). The drop-out rate will also be analyzed. | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Other | Feasibility and adherence of the intervention (exploratory) | Online questionnaire in the form of visual analogue scales (e.g., measure of the degree of ease with which the parents apply the target behaviors in daily life) and open-ended questions (e.g., barriers to the daily use of the target behaviors). The drop-out rate will also be analyzed. | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Primary | Parental reminiscing style | Filmed parent-child discussion about a shared event of the previous day (as naturally as possible, without time constraint and in absence of the experimenter). These discussions will be transcribed for analysis with a specific coding scheme. Index : based on various raw scores, indexes will be computed. | Group 1 : Baseline 1 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Primary | Parental reminiscing style | Filmed parent-child discussion about a shared event of the previous day (as naturally as possible, without time constraint and in absence of the experimenter). These discussions will be transcribed for analysis with a specific coding scheme. Index : based on various raw scores, indexes will be computed. | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Primary | Parental reminiscing style | Filmed parent-child discussion about a shared event of the previous day (as naturally as possible, without time constraint and in absence of the experimenter). These discussions will be transcribed for analysis with a specific coding scheme. Index : based on various raw scores, indexes will be computed. | Group 1 : Follow-up 2 (6 months after the intervention) | |
Primary | Parental reminiscing style | Filmed parent-child discussion about a shared event of the previous day (as naturally as possible, without time constraint and in absence of the experimenter). These discussions will be transcribed for analysis with a specific coding scheme. Index : based on various raw scores, indexes will be computed. | Group 2 : Baseline 1 (10 weeks before the intervention) | |
Primary | Parental reminiscing style | Filmed parent-child discussion about a shared event of the previous day (as naturally as possible, without time constraint and in absence of the experimenter). These discussions will be transcribed for analysis with a specific coding scheme. Index : based on various raw scores, indexes will be computed. | Group 2 : Baseline 2 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Primary | Parental reminiscing style | Filmed parent-child discussion about a shared event of the previous day (as naturally as possible, without time constraint and in absence of the experimenter). These discussions will be transcribed for analysis with a specific coding scheme. Index : based on various raw scores, indexes will be computed. | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Primary | Explicit knowledge about parental reminiscing | 10-item questionnaire aimed to assess parents' explicit knowledge about how to effectively discuss the past with their child (i.e., each item consists in a scenario and parents have to choose among different options which one would be the best way to interact with their child). 3 parallel versions of this questionnaire were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : number of correct responses. | Group 1 : Baseline 1 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Primary | Explicit knowledge about parental reminiscing | 10-item questionnaire aimed to assess parents' explicit knowledge about how to effectively discuss the past with their child (i.e., each item consists in a scenario and parents have to choose among different options which one would be the best way to interact with their child). 3 parallel versions of this questionnaire were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : number of correct responses. | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Primary | Explicit knowledge about parental reminiscing | 10-item questionnaire aimed to assess parents' explicit knowledge about how to effectively discuss the past with their child (i.e., each item consists in a scenario and parents have to choose among different options which one would be the best way to interact with their child). 3 parallel versions of this questionnaire were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : number of correct responses. | Group 1 : Follow-up 2 (6 months after the intervention) | |
Primary | Explicit knowledge about parental reminiscing | 10-item questionnaire aimed to assess parents' explicit knowledge about how to effectively discuss the past with their child (i.e., each item consists in a scenario and parents have to choose among different options which one would be the best way to interact with their child). 3 parallel versions of this questionnaire were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : number of correct responses. | Group 2 : Baseline 1 (10 weeks before the intervention) | |
Primary | Explicit knowledge about parental reminiscing | 10-item questionnaire aimed to assess parents' explicit knowledge about how to effectively discuss the past with their child (i.e., each item consists in a scenario and parents have to choose among different options which one would be the best way to interact with their child). 3 parallel versions of this questionnaire were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : number of correct responses. | Group 2 : Baseline 2 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Primary | Explicit knowledge about parental reminiscing | 10-item questionnaire aimed to assess parents' explicit knowledge about how to effectively discuss the past with their child (i.e., each item consists in a scenario and parents have to choose among different options which one would be the best way to interact with their child). 3 parallel versions of this questionnaire were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : number of correct responses. | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's autobiographical memory | Retrieval of autobiographical memories cued by words (i.e., food, play, family, friend, happy, cry). 2 words/assessment (i.e., order counterbalanced). Children's production will be analyzed through a specific coding scheme. Index : the nature and the richness of information addressed by children. | Group 1 : Baseline 1 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's autobiographical memory | Retrieval of autobiographical memories cued by words (i.e., food, play, family, friend, happy, cry). 2 words/assessment (i.e., order counterbalanced). Children's production will be analyzed through a specific coding scheme. Index : the nature and the richness of information addressed by children. | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's autobiographical memory | Retrieval of autobiographical memories cued by words (i.e., food, play, family, friend, happy, cry). 2 words/assessment (i.e., order counterbalanced). Children's production will be analyzed through a specific coding scheme. Index : the nature and the richness of information addressed by children. | Group 1 : Follow-up 2 (6 months after the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's autobiographical memory | Retrieval of autobiographical memories cued by words (i.e., food, play, family, friend, happy, cry). 2 words/assessment (i.e., order counterbalanced). Children's production will be analyzed through a specific coding scheme. Index : the nature and the richness of information addressed by children. | Group 2 : Baseline 1 (10 weeks before the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's autobiographical memory | Retrieval of autobiographical memories cued by words (i.e., food, play, family, friend, happy, cry). 2 words/assessment (i.e., order counterbalanced). Children's production will be analyzed through a specific coding scheme. Index : the nature and the richness of information addressed by children. | Group 2 : Baseline 2 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's autobiographical memory | Retrieval of autobiographical memories cued by words (i.e., food, play, family, friend, happy, cry). 2 words/assessment (i.e., order counterbalanced). Children's production will be analyzed through a specific coding scheme. Index : the nature and the richness of information addressed by children. | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (1) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through the House Test (Picard et al., 2012) and 2 parallel versions created by our research team for this study (i.e., order counterbalanced). These tasks include an encoding phase and a retrieval phase in the form of free-recall and recognition after a 10-minute delay Index : number of correct responses at the free-recall task and the recognition task. | Group 1 : Baseline 1 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (1) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through the House Test (Picard et al., 2012) and 2 parallel versions created by our research team for this study (i.e., order counterbalanced). These tasks include an encoding phase and a retrieval phase in the form of free-recall and recognition after a 10-minute delay Index : number of correct responses at the free-recall task and the recognition task. | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (1) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through the House Test (Picard et al., 2012) and 2 parallel versions created by our research team for this study (i.e., order counterbalanced). These tasks include an encoding phase and a retrieval phase in the form of free-recall and recognition after a 10-minute delay Index : number of correct responses at the free-recall task and the recognition task. | Group 1 : Follow-up 2 (6 months after the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (1) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through the House Test (Picard et al., 2012) and 2 parallel versions created by our research team for this study (i.e., order counterbalanced). These tasks include an encoding phase and a retrieval phase in the form of free-recall and recognition after a 10-minute delay Index : number of correct responses at the free-recall task and the recognition task. | Group 2 : Baseline 1 (10 weeks before the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (1) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through the House Test (Picard et al., 2012) and 2 parallel versions created by our research team for this study (i.e., order counterbalanced). These tasks include an encoding phase and a retrieval phase in the form of free-recall and recognition after a 10-minute delay Index : number of correct responses at the free-recall task and the recognition task. | Group 2 : Baseline 2 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (1) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through the House Test (Picard et al., 2012) and 2 parallel versions created by our research team for this study (i.e., order counterbalanced). These tasks include an encoding phase and a retrieval phase in the form of free-recall and recognition after a 10-minute delay Index : number of correct responses at the free-recall task and the recognition task. | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (2) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through a story-recall task which consists of listening to a story (i.e., encoding phase) immediately followed by a true-false recognition. 3 comparable story-recall tasks were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate sensitivity scores (i.e., reflecting children's ability to discriminate between studied information and lures). | Group 1 : Baseline 1 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (2) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through a story-recall task which consists of listening to a story (i.e., encoding phase) immediately followed by a true-false recognition. 3 comparable story-recall tasks were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate sensitivity scores (i.e., reflecting children's ability to discriminate between studied information and lures). | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (2) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through a story-recall task which consists of listening to a story (i.e., encoding phase) immediately followed by a true-false recognition. 3 comparable story-recall tasks were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate sensitivity scores (i.e., reflecting children's ability to discriminate between studied information and lures). | Group 1 : Follow-up 2 (6 months after the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (2) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through a story-recall task which consists of listening to a story (i.e., encoding phase) immediately followed by a true-false recognition. 3 comparable story-recall tasks were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate sensitivity scores (i.e., reflecting children's ability to discriminate between studied information and lures). | Group 2 : Baseline 1 (10 weeks before the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (2) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through a story-recall task which consists of listening to a story (i.e., encoding phase) immediately followed by a true-false recognition. 3 comparable story-recall tasks were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate sensitivity scores (i.e., reflecting children's ability to discriminate between studied information and lures). | Group 2 : Baseline 2 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Primary | Children's episodic memory (2) | Assessment of children's ability to learn new information through a story-recall task which consists of listening to a story (i.e., encoding phase) immediately followed by a true-false recognition. 3 comparable story-recall tasks were created (i.e., order counterbalanced). Index : a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate sensitivity scores (i.e., reflecting children's ability to discriminate between studied information and lures). | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's confidence judgments | Assessment of children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. In these tasks, for each memory decision, children have to rate their confidence in their decisions through a 2-point pictorial scale (for a study using this method, see Geurten & Bastin, 2019). Index : the meta d'/d' ratio (Fleming & Lau, 2014) will be calculated to reflect children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments. | Group 1 : Baseline 1 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's confidence judgments | Assessment of children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. In these tasks, for each memory decision, children have to rate their confidence in their decisions through a 2-point pictorial scale (for a study using this method, see Geurten & Bastin, 2019). Index : the meta d'/d' ratio (Fleming & Lau, 2014) will be calculated to reflect children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments. | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's confidence judgments | Assessment of children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. In these tasks, for each memory decision, children have to rate their confidence in their decisions through a 2-point pictorial scale (for a study using this method, see Geurten & Bastin, 2019). Index : the meta d'/d' ratio (Fleming & Lau, 2014) will be calculated to reflect children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments. | Group 1 : Follow-up 2 (6 months after the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's confidence judgments | Assessment of children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. In these tasks, for each memory decision, children have to rate their confidence in their decisions through a 2-point pictorial scale (for a study using this method, see Geurten & Bastin, 2019). Index : the meta d'/d' ratio (Fleming & Lau, 2014) will be calculated to reflect children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments. | Group 2 : Baseline 1 (10 weeks before the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's confidence judgments | Assessment of children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. In these tasks, for each memory decision, children have to rate their confidence in their decisions through a 2-point pictorial scale (for a study using this method, see Geurten & Bastin, 2019). Index : the meta d'/d' ratio (Fleming & Lau, 2014) will be calculated to reflect children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments. | Group 2 : Baseline 2 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's confidence judgments | Assessment of children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. In these tasks, for each memory decision, children have to rate their confidence in their decisions through a 2-point pictorial scale (for a study using this method, see Geurten & Bastin, 2019). Index : the meta d'/d' ratio (Fleming & Lau, 2014) will be calculated to reflect children's ability to make accurate confidence judgments. | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic | Assessment of children's use of the memorability-based heuristic when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. Indeed, this measure was allowed by the inclusion in each story of 8 low-memorable events and 8 high-memorable events. Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic was measured by contrasting their tendency to be more or less conservative in memory decisions for low-memorable versus high-memorable events. Index: a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate response bias scores. | Group 1 : Baseline 1 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic | Assessment of children's use of the memorability-based heuristic when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. Indeed, this measure was allowed by the inclusion in each story of 8 low-memorable events and 8 high-memorable events. Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic was measured by contrasting their tendency to be more or less conservative in memory decisions for low-memorable versus high-memorable events. Index: a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate response bias scores. | Group 1 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic | Assessment of children's use of the memorability-based heuristic when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. Indeed, this measure was allowed by the inclusion in each story of 8 low-memorable events and 8 high-memorable events. Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic was measured by contrasting their tendency to be more or less conservative in memory decisions for low-memorable versus high-memorable events. Index: a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate response bias scores. | Group 1 : Follow-up 2 (6 months after the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic | Assessment of children's use of the memorability-based heuristic when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. Indeed, this measure was allowed by the inclusion in each story of 8 low-memorable events and 8 high-memorable events. Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic was measured by contrasting their tendency to be more or less conservative in memory decisions for low-memorable versus high-memorable events. Index: a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate response bias scores. | Group 2 : Baseline 1 (10 weeks before the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic | Assessment of children's use of the memorability-based heuristic when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. Indeed, this measure was allowed by the inclusion in each story of 8 low-memorable events and 8 high-memorable events. Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic was measured by contrasting their tendency to be more or less conservative in memory decisions for low-memorable versus high-memorable events. Index: a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate response bias scores. | Group 2 : Baseline 2 (1 week before the intervention) | |
Secondary | Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic | Assessment of children's use of the memorability-based heuristic when performing the aforementioned story-recall tasks. Indeed, this measure was allowed by the inclusion in each story of 8 low-memorable events and 8 high-memorable events. Children's use of the memorability-based heuristic was measured by contrasting their tendency to be more or less conservative in memory decisions for low-memorable versus high-memorable events. Index: a signal detection analysis (Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) will be performed to calculate response bias scores. | Group 2 : Follow-up 1 (2 weeks after the intervention) |
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