Department of Health Sciences, University of York, York, England.
Diabetes Research Centre, University of Leicester, Leicester, England.
PLoS One. 2021 Dec 2;16(12):e0260788. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0260788. eCollection 2021.
Working memory is an essential cognitive skill for storing and processing limited amounts of information over short time periods. Researchers disagree about the extent to which socioeconomic position affects children's working memory, yet no study has systematically synthesised the literature regarding this topic. The current review therefore aimed to investigate the relationship between socioeconomic position and working memory in children, regarding both the magnitude and the variability of the association.
The review protocol was registered on PROSPERO and the PRISMA checklist was followed. Embase, Psycinfo and MEDLINE were comprehensively searched via Ovid from database inception until 3rd June 2021. Studies were screened by two reviewers at all stages. Studies were eligible if they included typically developing children aged 0-18 years old, with a quantitative association reported between any indicator of socioeconomic position and children's working memory task performance. Studies were synthesised using two data-synthesis methods: random effects meta-analyses and a Harvest plot.
The systematic review included 64 eligible studies with 37,737 individual children (aged 2 months to 18 years). Meta-analyses of 36 of these studies indicated that socioeconomic disadvantage was associated with significantly lower scores working memory measures; a finding that held across different working memory tasks, including those that predominantly tap into storage (d = 0.45; 95% CI 0.27 to 0.62) as well as those that require processing of information (d = 0.52; 0.31 to 0.72). A Harvest plot of 28 studies ineligible for meta-analyses further confirmed these findings. Finally, meta-regression analyses revealed that the association between socioeconomic position and working memory was not moderated by task modality, risk of bias, socioeconomic indicator, mean age in years, or the type of effect size.
This is the first systematic review to investigate the association between socioeconomic position and working memory in children. Socioeconomic disadvantage was associated with lower working memory ability in children, and that this association was similar across different working memory tasks. Given the strong association between working memory, learning, and academic attainment, there is a clear need to share these findings with practitioners working with children, and investigate ways to support children with difficulties in working memory.
工作记忆是一种重要的认知技能,用于在短时间内存储和处理有限数量的信息。研究人员对于社会经济地位对儿童工作记忆的影响程度存在分歧,但尚无研究系统地综合了这一主题的文献。因此,本综述旨在调查社会经济地位与儿童工作记忆之间的关系,包括关联的大小和可变性。
本综述方案已在 PROSPERO 上注册,并遵循 PRISMA 清单。通过 Ovid 在 Embase、Psycinfo 和 MEDLINE 上全面搜索,检索时间从数据库建立开始至 2021 年 6 月 3 日。在所有阶段,两名评审员都对研究进行了筛选。如果研究包括年龄在 0-18 岁之间的典型发展儿童,并且报告了任何社会经济地位指标与儿童工作记忆任务表现之间的定量关联,则研究符合条件。使用两种数据综合方法(随机效应荟萃分析和 Harvest 图)对研究进行综合。
本系统综述包括 64 项符合条件的研究,涉及 37737 名个体儿童(年龄 2 个月至 18 岁)。对其中 36 项研究的荟萃分析表明,社会经济劣势与工作记忆测量得分显著降低有关;这一发现适用于不同的工作记忆任务,包括主要涉及存储的任务(d = 0.45;95%CI 0.27 至 0.62)以及需要信息处理的任务(d = 0.52;0.31 至 0.72)。对 28 项不符合荟萃分析条件的研究的 Harvest 图进一步证实了这一发现。最后,元回归分析表明,社会经济地位与工作记忆之间的关联不受任务模式、偏倚风险、社会经济指标、平均年龄或效应量类型的调节。
这是第一项系统综述,旨在调查儿童社会经济地位与工作记忆之间的关联。社会经济劣势与儿童的工作记忆能力较低有关,而且这种关联在不同的工作记忆任务中相似。鉴于工作记忆、学习和学业成绩之间存在很强的关联,显然需要与从事儿童工作的从业者分享这些发现,并研究支持工作记忆困难儿童的方法。