4.4 Article

Strategy Use Fully Mediates the Relationship Between Working Memory Capacity and Performance on Raven's Matrices

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL
Volume 144, Issue 5, Pages 916-924

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/xge0000101

Keywords

working memory capacity; fluid intelligence; Raven's advanced progressive matrices; strategy use; individual differences

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Working memory capacity consistently correlates with fluid intelligence. It has been suggested that this relationship is partly attributable to strategy use: Participants with high working memory capacity would use more effective strategies, in turn leading to higher performance on fluid intelligence tasks. However, this idea has never been directly investigated. In 2 experiments, we tested this hypothesis by directly manipulating strategy use in a combined experimental-correlational approach (Experiment 1; N = 250) and by measuring strategy use with a self-report questionnaire (Experiment 2; N = 93). Inducing all participants to use an effective strategy in Raven's matrices decreased the correlation between working memory capacity and performance; the strategy use measure fully mediated the relationship between working memory capacity and performance on the matrices task. These findings indicate that individual differences in strategic behavior drive the predictive utility of working memory. We interpret the results within a theoretical framework integrating the multiple mediators of the relationship between working memory capacity and high-level cognition.

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