Sex Differences in Verbal Fluency Among Young Adults

Artykuł - publikacja recenzowana


Tytuł
Sex Differences in Verbal Fluency Among Young Adults
Odpowiedzialność
Andrzej Sokołowski, Ernest Tyburski, Anna Sołtys, and Ewa Karabanowicz
Twórcy
Sumy twórców
4 autorów
Punktacja publikacji
Osoba Dysc. Pc k m P U Pu Opis
0000-0002-9434-3084 5.11 100 2 4 100,00 0,5000 50,0000 Art.
0000-0002-8018-7017 5.11 100 2 4 100,00 0,5000 50,0000 Art.
0000-0002-4658-9119 Brak afiliacji do US
Gł. język publikacji
Angielski (English)
Data publikacji
2020
Objętość
0,7 (arkuszy wydawniczych), 11 (stron).
Identyfikator DOI
10.5709/acp-0288-1
Adres URL
http://www.ac-psych.org/en/download-pdf/volume/16/issue/2/id/291
Adres URL
http://www.ac-psych.org/en/issues/volume/16/issue/2 2020-05-04
Uwaga ogólna
Open access CC BY-NC-ND license.
Finansowanie
Cechy publikacji
  • Oryginalny artykuł naukowy
  • OpenAccess
Dane OpenAccess
CC_BY_NC_ND - Licencja,
FINAL_PUBLISHED - Wersja tekstu,
OPEN_JOURNAL - Sposób publikacji,
AT_PUBLICATION - Moment udostępnienia,
2020-02-24 - Data udostępnienia
Słowa kluczowe
Czasopismo
Advances in Cognitive Psychology
( ISSN 1895-1171 eISSN 1895-1171 )
Kraj wydania: Polska
Zeszyt: 16(2)
Strony: 92-102
Pobierz opis jako:
BibTeX, RIS
Data zgłoszenia do bazy Publi
2020-05-03
PBN
Wyświetl
WorkId
24235

Abstrakt

en

Verbal fluency tasks have been used as tools to measure various cognitive processes, such as executive functions, memory, and language. Sex differences in verbal fluency performance have
been mostly investigated in population studies. Little of this research has focused on young adults. The goal of this study was to assess the impact of sex and task category on word production and verbal strategies (i.e., cluster size and switches) in young adults. The phonemic (letter “k”, letter “f”) and semantic (animals, fruits, sharp objects) fluency measures were used. Men and women were compared in terms of the number of produced words and the use of verbal strategies (number of switches and mean cluster size controlled for produced words). Results revealed subtle sex differences in verbal fluency in young adults. Men performed slightly better in semantic fluency, producing more words, while there were no sex differences in verbal strategies. There were also no sex differences in word production and verbal strategies in the phonemic fluency tasks. Furthermore, there were differences in the number of produced words, mean cluster sizes, and switches between semantic tasks as well as between phonemic tasks. These results can be interpreted in the context of potential differences in mental lexicon and social roles. Moreover, our results suggest that assessment of verbal strategies and overall word production may be important in the context of sex differences in verbal fluency among young adults as well as in neuropsychological diagnosis.

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