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The relationship between anxiety-stability, working memory and cognitive style

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posted on 2024-07-09, 18:09 authored by Michael Grimley, Hassan Dahraei, Richard Riding
While prior research indicates that relationships exist between anxiety-stability and working memory, and cognitive style and anxiety-stability, they have not been considered together. The aim of this study was to consider how anxiety-stability is related to working memory, gender and style in interaction. The sample consisted of 179 12-13 year old Year 8 secondary comprehensive school pupils in the UK. Teachers rated the level of anxiety-stability of pupils. Pupils completed an assessment of working memory efficiency, the information processing index (IPI). They also did the cognitive styles analysis to determine their positions on the two fundamental cognitive style dimensions, which were indicated by two ratios: the Wholist-Analytic ratio and the Verbal-Imagery ratio. Working memory capacity and cognitive style interacted in their relationship with anxiety-stability, such that higher memory was associated with a greater increased stability for Wholist-Verbalisers and Analytic-Imagers than for Analytic-Verbalisers and Wholist-Imagers. The results were discussed in terms of the unitary versus complementary nature of style combinations.

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

0305-5698

Journal title

Educational Studies

Volume

34

Issue

3

Pagination

10 pp

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2008 Taylor & Francis. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

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