Extended trajectory of spatial memory errors in typical and atypical development: The role of binding and precision

Author:

Peng Maomiao1,Lovos Annalysa1ORCID,Bottrill Kenneth1,Hughes Katharine1,Sampsel Miranda1,Lee Nancy Raitano2,Abbeduto Leonard34,Thurman Angela John34,Edgin Jamie1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology The University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA

2. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences Drexel University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

3. MIND Institute, University of California Davis Health Sacramento California USA

4. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences University of California Davis Health Sacramento California USA

Abstract

AbstractSpatial reconstruction, a method for evaluating how individuals remember the placement of objects, has traditionally been evaluated through the aggregate estimation of placement errors. However, this approach may obscure the nature of task errors. Specifically, recent data has suggested the importance of examining the precision of responses, as well as absolute performance on item‐context bindings. In contrast to traditional analysis approaches based on the distance between the target and the reconstructed item, in this study we further explored three types of errors (swap error, global error, and local distance) that may all contribute to the distance, with particular emphasis on swap errors and local distance due to their associations with item‐context bindings and memory precision, respectively. We examined these errors in children aged 3–18 years, making comparisons between children with typical development (TD) and children with Down syndrome (DS), a population with known memory challenges. As expected, older children outperformed younger children in terms of overall memory accuracy. Of importance is that we measured uneven maturational trajectories of memory abilities across the various error types. Specifically, both remembered locations (irrespective of object identity) and swap errors (object‐location binding errors) align with the overall memory accuracy. Memory precision, as measured by local distance in simpler set size 2 trials, mirrored overall memory accuracy. However, for more complex set size 3 trials, local distance remained stable before age 8 and showed age‐related change thereafter. The group with DS showed reduced precision compared to a TD matched group, and measures of precision, and to a lesser extent binding errors, correlated with standard neuropsychological outcomes. Overall, our study contributed to a fine‐grained understanding of developing spatial memory ability in a large sample of typical developing children and a memory impaired population. These findings contribute to a growing body of research examining precision as a key factor in memory performance.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience

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