Zach Shipstead

Zach Shipstead
  • Professor (Assistant) at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

About

35
Publications
56,371
Reads
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4,549
Citations
Current institution
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Current position
  • Professor (Assistant)

Publications

Publications (35)
Article
Full-text available
Extant literature suggests that performance on visual arrays tasks reflects limited-capacity storage of visual information. However, there is also evidence to suggest that visual arrays task performance reflects individual differences in controlled processing. The purpose of this study is to empirically evaluate the degree to which visual arrays ta...
Article
Full-text available
This study uses a novel framework based on work by Shipstead, Harrison, and Engle (2016) that includes measures of both working memory capacity and fluid intelligence in an attempt to better understand the processes that influence successful reading comprehension at the latent level. Further, we extend this framework to a second educationally relev...
Poster
Full-text available
Visuospatial working memory (VSWM) task are often treated as if they strictly measure the storage capacity of a domain-specific system. The present study examined (1) The degree to which these tasks actually tap into domain-general processes (2) The role attention plays in task performance. Study 117 students from Arizona State University. 3 tests...
Article
Full-text available
The present study examined the degree to which tests of visuospatial storage capacity tap into domain-general storage and attention processes. This was done by comparing performance of visuospatial memory tasks with performance on sound-based sensory discrimination tasks. We found that memory task- and discrimination task performance both tapped in...
Article
Cambridge Core - Cognition - The Nature of Human Intelligence - edited by Robert J. Sternberg
Article
The present study examines the idea that time-based forgetting of outdated information can lead to better memory of currently relevant information. This was done using the visual arrays task, along with a between-subjects manipulation of both the retention interval (1 s vs. 4 s) and the time between two trials (1 s vs. 4 s). Consistent with prior w...
Poster
Full-text available
Examines the effect of between-trial delays on current-trial performance.
Poster
Full-text available
Fluid Intelligence as a Predictor of Memory Updating.Ashley Nespodzany , Arizona State University and Zach Shipstead Shipstead, Harrison, and Engle (2016) recently proposed that working memory capacity is defined by the ability to maintain relevant information, while fluid intelligence is defined by the ability to disengage from outdated informatio...
Poster
Full-text available
Examination of the role of maintenance and disengagement processes as explanations of the relation of Gf to reading comprehension.
Article
Full-text available
Working memory capacity and fluid intelligence have been demonstrated to be strongly correlated traits. Typically, high working memory capacity is believed to facilitate reasoning through accurate maintenance of relevant information. In this article, we present a proposal reframing this issue, such that tests of working memory capacity and fluid in...
Article
Full-text available
Previous research has identified several cognitive abilities that are important for multitasking, but few studies have attempted to measure a general multitasking ability using a diverse set of multitasks. In the final dataset, 534 young adult subjects completed measures of working memory, attention control, fluid intelligence, and multitasking. Co...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
We use confirmatory factor analysis to demonstrate that visuospatial working memory (VSWM) shares a domain-general component with verbal memory tasks, and has a domain-specific component independent of verbal memory. The domain-general component correlates with visuospatial and verbal reasoning ability. The domain-specific component only correlates...
Poster
Full-text available
The degree to which visuospatial working memory (VSWM) is separable from working memory in general is an open question. On one hand, the construct is often researched as a unitary, domain-specific system. On the other, there is evidence that VWSM shares a common processing component with verbal memory. One might interpret this shared component as d...
Article
Full-text available
Working memory training programs have generated great interest, with claims that the training interventions can have profound beneficial effects on children’s academic and intellectual attainment. We describe the criteria by which to evaluate evidence for or against the benefit of working memory training. Despite the promising results of initial re...
Article
Full-text available
Complex span and visual arrays are two common measures of working memory capacity that are respectively treated as measures of attention control and storage capacity. A recent analysis of these tasks concluded that (1) complex span performance has a relatively stronger relationship to fluid intelligence and (2) this is due to the requirement that p...
Poster
Full-text available
Presented at: March 28, 2015. ASU Open Door-West Campus. April 15, 2015. ASU Student research Expo.
Article
Full-text available
Studies on visual cognitive load have reported inconsistent effects of distractor interference when distractors have visual characteristic that are similar to the cognitive load. Some studies have shown that the cognitive load enhances distractor interference, while others reported an attenuating effect. We attribute these inconsistencies to the am...
Article
Full-text available
One of the reasons why working memory capacity is so widely researched is its substantial relationship with fluid intelligence. Although this relationship has been found in numerous studies, researchers have been unable to provide a conclusive answer as to why the two constructs are related. In a recent study, researchers examined which attributes...
Article
Full-text available
Measures of working memory capacity (WMC), such as complex span tasks (e.g., operation span), have become some of the most frequently used tasks in cognitive psychology. However, due to the length of time it takes to complete these tasks many researchers trying to draw conclusions about WMC forgo properly administering multiple tasks. But can the c...
Article
Full-text available
Working memory is a critical element of complex cognition, particularly under conditions of distraction and interference. Measures of working memory capacity correlate positively with many measures of real-world cognition, including fluid intelligence. There have been numerous attempts to use training procedures to increase working memory capacity...
Article
Full-text available
Numerous recent studies seem to provide evidence for the general intellectual benefits of working memory training. In reviews of the training literature, Shipstead, Redick, and Engle (2010, 2012) argued that the field should treat recent results with a critical eye. Many published working memory training studies suffer from design limitations (no-c...
Article
Full-text available
Cogmed working memory training is sold as a tool for improving cognitive abilities, such as attention and reasoning. At present, this program is marketed to schools as a means of improving underperforming students’ scholastic performance, and is also available at clinical practices as a treatment for ADHD. We review research conducted with Cogmed s...
Article
Full-text available
Highlights ► Working memory training cannot be argued to be either effective or non-effective. Rather it is a work in progress. ► As such, commercial working memory training products are deemed premature. ► We argue that the efficacy of working memory training paradigms must be judged on a case-by-case basis.
Article
Full-text available
The present study examines two varieties of working memory (WM) capacity task: visual arrays (i.e., a measure of the amount of information that can be maintained in working memory) and complex span (i.e., a task that taps WM-related attentional control). Using previously collected data sets we employ confirmatory factor analysis to demonstrate that...
Article
Full-text available
One approach to understanding working memory (WM) holds that individual differences in WM capacity arise from the amount of information a person can store in WM over short periods of time. This view is especially prevalent in WM research conducted with the visual arrays task. Within this tradition, many researchers have concluded that the average p...
Article
Full-text available
Working memory (WM) is a cognitive system that strongly relates to a person's ability to reason with novel information and direct attention to goal-relevant information. Due to the central role that WM plays in general cognition, it has become the focus of a rapidly growing training literature that seeks to affect broad cognitive change through pro...
Article
Full-text available
Previous studies have indicated that working memory capacity (WMC) is related to visual attention when selection of critical information must be made in the face of distraction. The present study examines whether WMC-related differences in flanker task performance might be decreased by displays that are designed to support bottom-up guidance of att...
Article
Full-text available
Recently, attempts have been made to alter the capacity of working memory (WMC) through extensive practice on adaptive working memory tasks that adjust difficulty in response to user performance. We discuss the design criteria required to claim validity as well as generalizability and how recent studies do or do not satisfy those criteria. It is co...
Article
Although the research of Balota, Black and Cheney (1992) has shown attentional deficits in older adults to be detrimental to performance in semantic priming tasks which require a shift of attention away from a presented category, no attempt has been made to link performance to measures of attentional control. The current study utilizes the same par...

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