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Título
Memory and metamemory for actions in children with autism: Exploring global metacognitive judgements
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Autism spectrum disorder
Children
Metamemory
Global judgements-of-learning
Enactment effect
Clasificación UNESCO
6114 Psicología Social
Fecha de publicación
2022
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Wojcik, D. Z., Moulin, C. J. A., & Souchay, C. (2022). Memory and metamemory for actions in children with autism: Exploring global metacognitive judgements. Research in Developmental Disabilities, 124, 104195. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ridd.2022.104195
Resumen
[EN] Background: Standards in education emphasize the role of metacognition in successful academic
outcomes for those with and without learning challenges. Research into metamemory in Autism
Spectrum Disorder (ASD) has produced mixed outcomes, with some studies finding children with
ASD to have spared metacognitive accuracy and others finding it impaired. While most research
has used item-by-item metamemory judgements, the novelty of the current study was to use
global judgments-of-learning (global JOLs).
Method: Twenty-three children with and twenty without ASD were presented with two lists of
action words during a learning phase and were asked to either act out the words in a selfperformed task or just listen to them being read aloud in a verbal task (control condition).
Typically, self-performance produces memory benefits called the enactment effect. For both tasks,
children also made pre-learning and post-learning global JOLs, stating how many words they
thought they would recall.
Results: Both groups demonstrated the enactment effect, but neither predicted its beneficial effect.
Compared to controls, participants with ASD were found to be less accurate in predicting their
future memory performance, specifically in the self-performed task. Both groups were comparable
in terms of metacognitive monitoring.
Conclusions: Overall, the findings suggest that success or failure in metacognitive tasks in ASD
might depend on task difficulty, and the type of metacognitive judgement used.
URI
ISSN
0891-4222
DOI
10.1016/j.ridd.2022.104195
Versión del editor
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Patrocinador
Publicación en abierto financiada por la Universidad de Salamanca como participante en el Acuerdo Transformativo CRUE-CSIC con Elsevier, 2021-2024













