Outcomes of Varied Activities in Working Memory Training for Children: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Details
Publication Year 2026-03,Volume 29,Issue #2,Page e70130
Journal Title
Developmental Science
Publication Type
Research article
Abstract
Although cognitive training with varied activities is commonly assumed to maximize training benefits, this has not been systematically tested in children. This randomized controlled trial evaluated outcomes following working memory training with either two, four, or six varied activities compared to an active control in 197 Australian primary school children in Grades 2-5 (7-11 years). The interventions were embedded in Minecraft Education Edition and delivered in class daily over 2 weeks, with the maximum total training dose ranging from 175 to 225 min. The working memory training included backward span and following instructions activities that varied by stimulus type. The active control involved creative worldbuilding. Measures of working memory (near and intermediate transfer), reasoning and inattention (far transfer) were completed at baseline, immediately, and 3-months post-intervention. None of the working memory training conditions (two, four, and six varied activities) performed better than the active control on the outcome measures either immediately or 3 months after the intervention. Findings fail to provide any evidence that varied cognitive training activities maximize cognitive training benefits in children.
Publisher
Wiley
Keywords
Humans; *Memory, Short-Term/physiology; Child; Male; Female; Cognition/physiology; *Learning/physiology; Attention/physiology; Cognitive Training; children; transfer effects; varied activities; working memory training
Department(s)
Psychosocial Oncology
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2026-01-20 05:38:39
Last Modified: 2026-01-20 05:38:55
An error has occurred. This application may no longer respond until reloaded. Reload 🗙