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Question 1 of 34
1. Question
Right or wrong ? Correct any mistakes in the highlighted phrases.
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Question:
My mum had been forgetting to turn off the oven, so there was a terrible smell of gas in the kitchen.
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Question 2 of 34
2. Question
Right (/) or wrong (X)? Correct any mistakes in the highlighted phrases.
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Question:
Most days we rode our bikes to school, but sometimes we were catching the bus.
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Question 3 of 34
3. Question
Right (/) or wrong (X)? Correct any mistakes in the highlighted phrases.
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Question:
One day, our car used to break down in the fast lane of the motorway.
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Question 4 of 34
4. Question
Right (/) or wrong (X)? Correct any mistakes in the highlighted phrases.
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Question:
When we were kids, our dad would give us a packed lunch and send us out to play for the day.
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Question 5 of 34
5. Question
Right (/) or wrong (X)? Correct any mistakes in the highlighted phrases.
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Question:
Emily’s grandparents would live in an old farmhouse in the heart of the countryside.
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Question 6 of 34
6. Question
Right (/) or wrong (X)? Correct any mistakes in the highlighted phrases.
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Question:
I’d hidden in the bushes for over an hour before I realized that everyone else had gone home.
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Question 7 of 34
7. Question
Right (/) or wrong (X)? Correct any mistakes in the highlighted phrases.
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Question:
When we got home from school that evening, our parents still worked.
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Question 8 of 34
8. Question
Right (/) or wrong (X)? Correct any mistakes in the highlighted phrases.
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Question:
I burst into tears when I saw what my brother had done to my favourite doll.
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Question 9 of 34
9. Question
Complete the text with the correct form of the verbs in brackets. Use a narrative tense or would / used to.
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Question:
When was (be) little, (share) a bedroom with my sister Catherine. As I was eight years her junior, I obviously (go) to bed earlier than her. As soon as (clean) my teeth, my mum (lie) on my sister’s bed and sing me nursery rhymes until (fall) asleep. One night when my mum (sing) for about five minutes, she suddenly (stop) and (stand) up. (look) over at her
and saw that she (stare) at something on the wall above my head. Without raising her voice, she (tell) me to go downstairs where my dad (watch) TV. Later she told me she (see) a big, hairy spider climb out of the air grille and make its way up the wall. (not sleep) much that night, as you can imagine!
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Question 10 of 34
10. Question
Complete the sentences with the abstract nouns of the bold words.
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Question:
I’m afraid of flying. I’ve never been abroad because of my of crashing.
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Question 11 of 34
11. Question
Complete the sentences with the abstract nouns of the bold words.
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Question:
My dad’s health has improved a lot. We’ve noticed a great .
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Question 12 of 34
12. Question
Complete the sentences with the abstract nouns of the bold words.
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Question:
We hated our physics teacher with a vengeance. I’m fairly sure our was returned as well.
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Question 13 of 34
13. Question
Complete the sentences with the abstract nouns of the bold words.
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Question:
The dead statesman was buried immediately. The whole country mourned his .
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Question 14 of 34
14. Question
Complete the sentences with the abstract nouns of the bold words.
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Question:
For medicine to work, you have to believe in it. It is often this that makes you well again.
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Question 15 of 34
15. Question
Complete the sentences with the abstract nouns of the bold words.
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Question:
Rosie was so ashamed of her behaviour that her face burned with .
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Question 16 of 34
16. Question
Complete the sentences with the correct form of the words in brackets.
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Question:
I n some societies, the of the older generation must never be questioned, (wise)
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Question 17 of 34
17. Question
Complete the sentences with the correct form of the words in brackets.
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Question:
Despite a very traumatic , Adam grew up to be quite a sensible young man. (child)
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Question 18 of 34
18. Question
Complete the sentences with the correct form of the words in brackets.
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Question:
Ruth tried to hide the in her eyes as she left the house for ever, (sad)
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Question 19 of 34
19. Question
Complete the sentences with the correct form of the words in brackets.
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Question:
We had a big family for my dad’s 80th birthday, (celebrate)
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Question 20 of 34
20. Question
Complete the sentences with the correct form of the words in brackets.
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Question:
I remembered to renew my at the golf club before the tournament started, (member)
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Question 21 of 34
21. Question
Complete the sentences with the correct form of the words in brackets.
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Question:
My grandmother will be staying in a nursing home until she has fully recovered from her . (ill)
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Question 22 of 34
22. Question
Complete the sentences with the correct form of the words in brackets.
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Question:
We dread our history lectures because every week we nearly die of . (bored)
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Question 23 of 34
23. Question
Look at the word pairs. Choose the abstract nouns where the stress is different.
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Question 24 of 34
24. Question
Look at the word pairs. Choose the abstract nouns where the stress is different.
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Question 25 of 34
25. Question
Look at the word pairs. Choose the abstract nouns where the stress is different.
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Question 26 of 34
26. Question
Listen to five people talking about their earliest memories. Which speaker doubts whether they can actually remember experiencing the incident?
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Question:
Which speaker doubts whether they can actually remember experiencing the incident?
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Question 27 of 34
27. Question
Listen again and answer the questions with speakers 1-5. Use each speaker twice. Who talks about…?
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Questions:
A a significant day in many people’s lives
B an everyday occurrence
C a moment just before or after a flight
D some dramatic weather
E finding something beautiful
F something that others may find quite boring
G receiving advice from a parent
H seeing a photo of themselves
I damage to a property
J feeling anxious on this day
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Question 28 of 34
28. Question
Read the article once. What year do childhood memories need to survive until to stand a chance of making it into adulthood?
______________________________________________________________________________________________
When childhood memories fade
Most adults struggle to recall events from their first few years of life and now scientists have identified exactly when these childhood memories are lost forever. A new study into childhood amnesia – the phenomenon where early memories are forgotten — has found that it tends to take effect around the age of seven.
The researchers found that while most three year olds can recall a lot of what happened to them over a year earlier, these memories can persist while they are five and six, by the time they are over seven these memories decline rapidly.
The psychologists behind the research say this is because at around this age the way we form memories begins to change. Before the age of seven, children tend to have an immature form of recall where they do not have a sense of time or place in their memories. In older children, however, the early events they can recall tend to be more adult like in their content and the way they are formed. Children also have a far faster rate of forgetting than adults and so the turnover of memories tends to be higher, meaning early memories are less likely to survive.
Professor Patricia Bauer, a psychologist and associate dean for research at Emory College of Art and Science, studied 83 children over several years for the research, which was published in the scientific journal Memory. The youngsters first visited the laboratory at the age of three years old and discussed six unique events from their past, such as family outings, camping holidays, trips to the zoo, first day of school and birthdays. The children then returned for a second session at the ages between five years old and nine years old to discuss the same events and were asked to recall details they had previously remembered.
The researchers found that between the ages of five and seven, the amount of memories the children could recall remained between 63 and 72 per cent. However, the amount of information the children who were eight and nine years old could remember dropped dramatically to 35 and 36 per cent.
When the researchers looked closely at the kind of details the children were and were not able to remember, they found marked age differences. The memories of the younger children tended to lack autobiographical narrative such as place and time. Their memories also had less narrative, which researchers believe may lead to a process known as ‘retrieval induced forgetting’ — where the action of remembering causes other information to be forgotten. As the children got older, however, the memories they recalled from early childhood tended to have these features.
Professor Bauer said, ‘The fact that the younger children had less complete narratives relative to the older children, likely has consequences for the continued accessibility of early memories beyond the first decade of life. We anticipate that memories that survive into the ninth or tenth year of life, when narrative skills are more developed, would continue to be accessible over time.’-
Question:
What year do childhood memories need to survive until to stand a chance of making it into adulthood?
CorrectIncorrect -
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Question 29 of 34
29. Question
Read the article again and mark the sentences T (true) or F (false).
When childhood memories fade
Most adults struggle to recall events from their first few years of life and now scientists have identified exactly when these childhood memories are lost forever. A new study into childhood amnesia – the phenomenon where early memories are forgotten — has found that it tends to take effect around the age of seven.
The researchers found that while most three year olds can recall a lot of what happened to them over a year earlier, these memories can persist while they are five and six, by the time they are over seven these memories decline rapidly.
The psychologists behind the research say this is because at around this age the way we form memories begins to change. Before the age of seven, children tend to have an immature form of recall where they do not have a sense of time or place in their memories. In older children, however, the early events they can recall tend to be more adult like in their content and the way they are formed. Children also have a far faster rate of forgetting than adults and so the turnover of memories tends to be higher, meaning early memories are less likely to survive.
Professor Patricia Bauer, a psychologist and associate dean for research at Emory College of Art and Science, studied 83 children over several years for the research, which was published in the scientific journal Memory. The youngsters first visited the laboratory at the age of three years old and discussed six unique events from their past, such as family outings, camping holidays, trips to the zoo, first day of school and birthdays. The children then returned for a second session at the ages between five years old and nine years old to discuss the same events and were asked to recall details they had previously remembered.
The researchers found that between the ages of five and seven, the amount of memories the children could recall remained between 63 and 72 per cent. However, the amount of information the children who were eight and nine years old could remember dropped dramatically to 35 and 36 per cent.
When the researchers looked closely at the kind of details the children were and were not able to remember, they found marked age differences. The memories of the younger children tended to lack autobiographical narrative such as place and time. Their memories also had less narrative, which researchers believe may lead to a process known as ‘retrieval induced forgetting’ — where the action of remembering causes other information to be forgotten. As the children got older, however, the memories they recalled from early childhood tended to have these features.
Professor Bauer said, ‘The fact that the younger children had less complete narratives relative to the older children, likely has consequences for the continued accessibility of early memories beyond the first decade of life. We anticipate that memories that survive into the ninth or tenth year of life, when narrative skills are more developed, would continue to be accessible over time.’1. Question:
At the age of five or six, children tend to still remember events that happened when they were two.
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Question 30 of 34
30. Question
Read the article again and mark the sentences T (true) or F (false).
When childhood memories fade
Most adults struggle to recall events from their first few years of life and now scientists have identified exactly when these childhood memories are lost forever. A new study into childhood amnesia – the phenomenon where early memories are forgotten — has found that it tends to take effect around the age of seven.
The researchers found that while most three year olds can recall a lot of what happened to them over a year earlier, these memories can persist while they are five and six, by the time they are over seven these memories decline rapidly.
The psychologists behind the research say this is because at around this age the way we form memories begins to change. Before the age of seven, children tend to have an immature form of recall where they do not have a sense of time or place in their memories. In older children, however, the early events they can recall tend to be more adult like in their content and the way they are formed. Children also have a far faster rate of forgetting than adults and so the turnover of memories tends to be higher, meaning early memories are less likely to survive.
Professor Patricia Bauer, a psychologist and associate dean for research at Emory College of Art and Science, studied 83 children over several years for the research, which was published in the scientific journal Memory. The youngsters first visited the laboratory at the age of three years old and discussed six unique events from their past, such as family outings, camping holidays, trips to the zoo, first day of school and birthdays. The children then returned for a second session at the ages between five years old and nine years old to discuss the same events and were asked to recall details they had previously remembered.
The researchers found that between the ages of five and seven, the amount of memories the children could recall remained between 63 and 72 per cent. However, the amount of information the children who were eight and nine years old could remember dropped dramatically to 35 and 36 per cent.
When the researchers looked closely at the kind of details the children were and were not able to remember, they found marked age differences. The memories of the younger children tended to lack autobiographical narrative such as place and time. Their memories also had less narrative, which researchers believe may lead to a process known as ‘retrieval induced forgetting’ — where the action of remembering causes other information to be forgotten. As the children got older, however, the memories they recalled from early childhood tended to have these features.
Professor Bauer said, ‘The fact that the younger children had less complete narratives relative to the older children, likely has consequences for the continued accessibility of early memories beyond the first decade of life. We anticipate that memories that survive into the ninth or tenth year of life, when narrative skills are more developed, would continue to be accessible over time.’2. Question:
From the age of seven, early memories don’t feature key details like location.
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Question 31 of 34
31. Question
Read the article again and mark the sentences T (true) or F (false).
When childhood memories fade
Most adults struggle to recall events from their first few years of life and now scientists have identified exactly when these childhood memories are lost forever. A new study into childhood amnesia – the phenomenon where early memories are forgotten — has found that it tends to take effect around the age of seven.
The researchers found that while most three year olds can recall a lot of what happened to them over a year earlier, these memories can persist while they are five and six, by the time they are over seven these memories decline rapidly.
The psychologists behind the research say this is because at around this age the way we form memories begins to change. Before the age of seven, children tend to have an immature form of recall where they do not have a sense of time or place in their memories. In older children, however, the early events they can recall tend to be more adult like in their content and the way they are formed. Children also have a far faster rate of forgetting than adults and so the turnover of memories tends to be higher, meaning early memories are less likely to survive.
Professor Patricia Bauer, a psychologist and associate dean for research at Emory College of Art and Science, studied 83 children over several years for the research, which was published in the scientific journal Memory. The youngsters first visited the laboratory at the age of three years old and discussed six unique events from their past, such as family outings, camping holidays, trips to the zoo, first day of school and birthdays. The children then returned for a second session at the ages between five years old and nine years old to discuss the same events and were asked to recall details they had previously remembered.
The researchers found that between the ages of five and seven, the amount of memories the children could recall remained between 63 and 72 per cent. However, the amount of information the children who were eight and nine years old could remember dropped dramatically to 35 and 36 per cent.
When the researchers looked closely at the kind of details the children were and were not able to remember, they found marked age differences. The memories of the younger children tended to lack autobiographical narrative such as place and time. Their memories also had less narrative, which researchers believe may lead to a process known as ‘retrieval induced forgetting’ — where the action of remembering causes other information to be forgotten. As the children got older, however, the memories they recalled from early childhood tended to have these features.
Professor Bauer said, ‘The fact that the younger children had less complete narratives relative to the older children, likely has consequences for the continued accessibility of early memories beyond the first decade of life. We anticipate that memories that survive into the ninth or tenth year of life, when narrative skills are more developed, would continue to be accessible over time.’3. Question:
Children recalled six different life events at their later sessions with the psychologist.
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Question 32 of 34
32. Question
Read the article again and mark the sentences T (true) or F (false).
When childhood memories fade
Most adults struggle to recall events from their first few years of life and now scientists have identified exactly when these childhood memories are lost forever. A new study into childhood amnesia – the phenomenon where early memories are forgotten — has found that it tends to take effect around the age of seven.
The researchers found that while most three year olds can recall a lot of what happened to them over a year earlier, these memories can persist while they are five and six, by the time they are over seven these memories decline rapidly.
The psychologists behind the research say this is because at around this age the way we form memories begins to change. Before the age of seven, children tend to have an immature form of recall where they do not have a sense of time or place in their memories. In older children, however, the early events they can recall tend to be more adult like in their content and the way they are formed. Children also have a far faster rate of forgetting than adults and so the turnover of memories tends to be higher, meaning early memories are less likely to survive.
Professor Patricia Bauer, a psychologist and associate dean for research at Emory College of Art and Science, studied 83 children over several years for the research, which was published in the scientific journal Memory. The youngsters first visited the laboratory at the age of three years old and discussed six unique events from their past, such as family outings, camping holidays, trips to the zoo, first day of school and birthdays. The children then returned for a second session at the ages between five years old and nine years old to discuss the same events and were asked to recall details they had previously remembered.
The researchers found that between the ages of five and seven, the amount of memories the children could recall remained between 63 and 72 per cent. However, the amount of information the children who were eight and nine years old could remember dropped dramatically to 35 and 36 per cent.
When the researchers looked closely at the kind of details the children were and were not able to remember, they found marked age differences. The memories of the younger children tended to lack autobiographical narrative such as place and time. Their memories also had less narrative, which researchers believe may lead to a process known as ‘retrieval induced forgetting’ — where the action of remembering causes other information to be forgotten. As the children got older, however, the memories they recalled from early childhood tended to have these features.
Professor Bauer said, ‘The fact that the younger children had less complete narratives relative to the older children, likely has consequences for the continued accessibility of early memories beyond the first decade of life. We anticipate that memories that survive into the ninth or tenth year of life, when narrative skills are more developed, would continue to be accessible over time.’4. Question:
The events discussed with the psychologist included day-to-day school life and the context of lessons.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 33 of 34
33. Question
Read the article again and mark the sentences T (true) or F (false).
When childhood memories fade
Most adults struggle to recall events from their first few years of life and now scientists have identified exactly when these childhood memories are lost forever. A new study into childhood amnesia – the phenomenon where early memories are forgotten — has found that it tends to take effect around the age of seven.
The researchers found that while most three year olds can recall a lot of what happened to them over a year earlier, these memories can persist while they are five and six, by the time they are over seven these memories decline rapidly.
The psychologists behind the research say this is because at around this age the way we form memories begins to change. Before the age of seven, children tend to have an immature form of recall where they do not have a sense of time or place in their memories. In older children, however, the early events they can recall tend to be more adult like in their content and the way they are formed. Children also have a far faster rate of forgetting than adults and so the turnover of memories tends to be higher, meaning early memories are less likely to survive.
Professor Patricia Bauer, a psychologist and associate dean for research at Emory College of Art and Science, studied 83 children over several years for the research, which was published in the scientific journal Memory. The youngsters first visited the laboratory at the age of three years old and discussed six unique events from their past, such as family outings, camping holidays, trips to the zoo, first day of school and birthdays. The children then returned for a second session at the ages between five years old and nine years old to discuss the same events and were asked to recall details they had previously remembered.
The researchers found that between the ages of five and seven, the amount of memories the children could recall remained between 63 and 72 per cent. However, the amount of information the children who were eight and nine years old could remember dropped dramatically to 35 and 36 per cent.
When the researchers looked closely at the kind of details the children were and were not able to remember, they found marked age differences. The memories of the younger children tended to lack autobiographical narrative such as place and time. Their memories also had less narrative, which researchers believe may lead to a process known as ‘retrieval induced forgetting’ — where the action of remembering causes other information to be forgotten. As the children got older, however, the memories they recalled from early childhood tended to have these features.
Professor Bauer said, ‘The fact that the younger children had less complete narratives relative to the older children, likely has consequences for the continued accessibility of early memories beyond the first decade of life. We anticipate that memories that survive into the ninth or tenth year of life, when narrative skills are more developed, would continue to be accessible over time.’5. Question:
By the age of eight or nine, children could only recall approximately a third of their early memories.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 34 of 34
34. Question
Read the article again and mark the sentences T (true) or F (false).
When childhood memories fade
Most adults struggle to recall events from their first few years of life and now scientists have identified exactly when these childhood memories are lost forever. A new study into childhood amnesia – the phenomenon where early memories are forgotten — has found that it tends to take effect around the age of seven.
The researchers found that while most three year olds can recall a lot of what happened to them over a year earlier, these memories can persist while they are five and six, by the time they are over seven these memories decline rapidly.
The psychologists behind the research say this is because at around this age the way we form memories begins to change. Before the age of seven, children tend to have an immature form of recall where they do not have a sense of time or place in their memories. In older children, however, the early events they can recall tend to be more adult like in their content and the way they are formed. Children also have a far faster rate of forgetting than adults and so the turnover of memories tends to be higher, meaning early memories are less likely to survive.
Professor Patricia Bauer, a psychologist and associate dean for research at Emory College of Art and Science, studied 83 children over several years for the research, which was published in the scientific journal Memory. The youngsters first visited the laboratory at the age of three years old and discussed six unique events from their past, such as family outings, camping holidays, trips to the zoo, first day of school and birthdays. The children then returned for a second session at the ages between five years old and nine years old to discuss the same events and were asked to recall details they had previously remembered.
The researchers found that between the ages of five and seven, the amount of memories the children could recall remained between 63 and 72 per cent. However, the amount of information the children who were eight and nine years old could remember dropped dramatically to 35 and 36 per cent.
When the researchers looked closely at the kind of details the children were and were not able to remember, they found marked age differences. The memories of the younger children tended to lack autobiographical narrative such as place and time. Their memories also had less narrative, which researchers believe may lead to a process known as ‘retrieval induced forgetting’ — where the action of remembering causes other information to be forgotten. As the children got older, however, the memories they recalled from early childhood tended to have these features.
Professor Bauer said, ‘The fact that the younger children had less complete narratives relative to the older children, likely has consequences for the continued accessibility of early memories beyond the first decade of life. We anticipate that memories that survive into the ninth or tenth year of life, when narrative skills are more developed, would continue to be accessible over time.’6. Question:
The researchers found out that the kind of details which stayed in the mind didn’t alter much over the years.
CorrectIncorrect