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Dive into the research topics where Catherine Willis is active.

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Featured researches published by Catherine Willis.


Memory | 1994

The Children's Test of Nonword Repetition: a test of phonological working memory.

Susan E. Gathercole; Catherine Willis; Alan D. Baddeley; Hazel Emslie

This article presents findings from the Childrens Test of Nonword Repetition (CNRep). Normative data based on its administration to over 600 children aged between four and nine years are reported. Close developmental links are established between CNRep scores and vocabulary, reading, and comprehensive skills in children during the early school years. The links between nonword repetition and language skills are shown to be consistently higher and more specific than those obtained between language skills and another simple verbal task with a significant phonological memory component, auditory digit span. The psychological mechanisms underpinning these distinctive developmental relationships between nonword repetition and language development are considered.


Developmental Psychology | 1992

Phonological memory and vocabulary development during the early school years: a longitudinal study

Susan E. Gathercole; Catherine Willis; Hazel Emslie; Alan D. Baddeley

The nature of the developmental association between phonological memory and vocabulary knowledge was explored in a longitudinal study. At each of 4 waves (at ages 4, 5, 6, and 8 yrs), measures of vocabulary, phonological memory, nonverbal intelligence, and reading were taken from 80 children. Comparisons of cross-lagged partial correlations revealed a significant shift in the causal underpinnings of the relationship between phonological memory and vocabulary development before and after 5 yrs of age. Between 4 and 5 yrs, phonological memory skills appeared to exert a direct causal influence on vocabulary acquisition. Subsequently, though, vocabulary knowledge became the major pacemaker in the developmental relationship, with the earlier influence of phonological memory on vocabulary development subsiding to a nonsignificant level. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2008 APA, all rights reserved)


Applied Psycholinguistics | 1991

The influences of number of syllables and wordlikeness on children’s repetition of nonwords

Susan E. Gathercole; Catherine Willis; Hazel Emslie; Alan D. Baddeley

It has recently been suggested that the developmental association between nonword repetition performance and vocabulary knowledge reflects the contribution of phonological memory processes to vocabulary acquisition (e.g., Gathercole & Baddeley, 1989). An alternative account of the association is that the child uses existing vocabulary knowledge to support memory for nonwords. The present article tests between these two alternative accounts by evaluating the role of phonological memory and linguistic factors in nonword repetition. In a longitudinal database, repetition accuracy in 4-, 5-, and 6-year-olds was found to be sensitive to two independent factors: a phonological memory factor, nonword length, and a linguistic factor, wordlikeness. To explain these combined influences, it is suggested that repeating nonwords involves temporary phonological memory storage which may be supported by either a specific lexical analogy or by an appropriate abstract phonological frame generated from structurally similar vocabulary items.


British Journal of Development Psychology | 2005

Working memory and phonological awareness as predictors of progress towards early learning goals at school entry

Tracy Packiam Alloway; Susan E. Gathercole; Anne-Marie Adams; Catherine Willis; Rachel Eaglen; Emily Lamont

This study investigates whether working memory skills of children are related to teacher ratings of their progress towards learning goals at the time of school entry, at 4 or 5 years of age. A sample of 194 children was tested on measures of working memory, phonological awareness, and non-verbal ability, in addition to the school-based baseline assessments in the areas of reading, writing, mathematics, speaking and listening, and personal and social development. Various aspects of cognitive functioning formed unique associations with baseline assessments; for example complex memory span with rated writing skills, phonological short-term memory with both reading and speaking and listening skills, and sentence repetition scores with both mathematics and personal and social skills. Rated reading skills were also uniquely associated with phonological awareness scores. The findings indicate that the capacity to store and process material over short periods of time, referred to as working memory, and also the awareness of phonological structure, may play a crucial role in key learning areas for children at the beginning of formal education.


Memory | 2001

Phonological short-term memory contributions to sentence processing in young children.

Catherine Willis; Susan E. Gathercole

Two experiments investigated the contribution of phonological short-term memory to the processing of spoken sentences by 4- and 5-year-old children. In Experiment 1, sentences contained either short or longer words, and varied in syntactic structure. Overall, repetition but not comprehension of the sentences was significantly influenced by word length. In Experiment 2, children selected on the basis of their high phonological short-term memory ability were founded to be superior at repeating sentences to children of lower phonological short-term memory ability, although the two groups did not differ in their comprehension accuracy for the same sentences. In both experiments, comprehension and repetition performance were differently influenced by particular sentence structures. It is proposed that sentence repetition in children is constrained by phonological memory capacity, and is therefore directly influenced by memory-related factors that include the length and number of words in sentences, and individual differences in memory skills.


International Journal of Psychology | 1999

Working Memory and Spoken Language Comprehension in Young Children

Anne-Marie Adams; Lorna Bourke; Catherine Willis

This study has two theoretical dimensions: (a) to explore which components of Baddeleys (1986) working memory model are associated with childrens spoken language comprehension, and (b) to compare the extent to which measures of the components of this fractionated model and an index of a unitary model (listening span) are able to predict individual differences in spoken language comprehension. Correlational analyses revealed that within a group of 66 4- and 5-year-old children both listening span and phonological memory, but not visuospatial memory, were associated with vocabulary knowledge and spoken language comprehension. However, of the proposed measures of central executive function - dual task coordination, sustained attention, verbal fluency - only the latter was related to childrens ability to understand spoken language. Hierarchical regression analyses indicated that variance in vocabulary knowledge was best explained by phonological memory skills, whereas individual differences in spoken langu...


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2012

Different Components of Working Memory Have Different Relationships with Different Mathematical Skills.

Fiona Simmons; Catherine Willis; Anne-Marie Adams

A comprehensive working memory battery and tests of mathematical skills were administered to 90 children-41 in Year 1 (5-6 years of age) and 49 in Year 3 (7-8 years of age). Working memory could explain statistically significant variance in number writing, magnitude judgment, and single-digit arithmetic, but the different components of working memory had different relationships with the different skills. Visual-spatial sketchpad (VSSP) functioning predicted unique variance in magnitude judgments and number writing. Central executive functioning explained unique variance in the addition accuracy of Year 1 children. The unique variance explained in Year 3 multiplication explained by phonological loop functioning just missed conventional levels of significance (p=.06). The results are consistent with the VSSP having a role in the development of number writing and magnitude judgments but a lesser role in early arithmetic.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2015

Identifying the cognitive predictors of early counting and calculation skills: Evidence from a longitudinal study.

Elena Soto-Calvo; Fiona Simmons; Catherine Willis; Anne-Marie Adams

The extent to which phonological, visual-spatial short-term memory (STM), and nonsymbolic quantitative skills support the development of counting and calculation skills was examined in this 14-month longitudinal study of 125 children. Initial assessments were made when the children were 4 years 8 months old. Phonological awareness, visual-spatial STM, and nonsymbolic approximate discrimination predicted growth in early calculation skills.These results suggest that both the approximate number system and domain-general phonological and visual-spatial skills support early calculation. In contrast, only performance on a small nonsymbolic quantity discrimination task (where the presented quantities were always within the subitizing range) predicted growth in cardinal counting skills. These results suggest that the development of counting and the development of calculation are supported by different cognitive abilities.


British Journal of Educational Psychology | 2013

The impact of the development of verbal recoding on children's early writing skills

Anne-Marie Adams; Fiona Simmons; Catherine Willis; Sarah Porter

BACKGROUND The spontaneous recoding of visual stimuli into a phonological code to aid short-term retention has been associated with progress in learning to read (Palmer, 2000b). AIM This study examined whether there was a comparable association with the development of writing skills. SAMPLE One hundred eight children (64 males) in the second year of the UK educational system (mean age 5:8 years, SD = 4 months) were recruited to the study. METHODS The children participated in tasks to assess their general cognitive abilities, reading skills, and their predominant short-term memory (STM) strategy for retaining visually presented stimuli. On the basis of their memory profile, children were classified as either engaging in verbal recoding of the stimuli (N = 31) or not (N = 77). Writing performance was indexed as alphabet transcription, spelling, and early text production skills. RESULTS Children classified as verbal recoders demonstrated better spelling performance and produced more individual letters, words, and T-units in their texts than did children who persisted with a visual memory strategy. In contrast, the alphabet transcription abilities of the groups did not differ. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that variance in text production skills was associated with STM capacity and that moreover, significant independent variance in the number of words and T-units in the childrens texts was predicted by individual differences in verbal recoding abilities. CONCLUSION The results suggest that the development of verbal recoding skills in STM may play a role in childrens early progress in writing, particularly their text generation skills.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2006

Working memory in children with reading disabilities

Susan E. Gathercole; Tracy Packiam Alloway; Catherine Willis; Anne-Marie Adams

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Susan E. Gathercole

Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

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Fiona Simmons

Liverpool John Moores University

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Hazel Emslie

Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

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Elena Soto-Calvo

Liverpool John Moores University

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Lorna Bourke

Liverpool Hope University

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