Original Research

Measuring working memory in contexts of high adversity: Using the digit span in North Kivu

Isabelle Blanchette, Blaise Balume Bakulikira, Marie-Chantal Ingabire, Eric Kankunda Moket, Serge Caparos
African Journal of Psychological Assessment | Vol 7 | a177 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/ajopa.v7i0.177 | © 2025 Isabelle Blanchette, Blaise Balume Bakulikira, Marie-Chantal Ingabire, Eric Kankunda Moket, Serge Caparos | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 16 January 2025 | Published: 15 September 2025

About the author(s)

Isabelle Blanchette, School of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, Laval University, Québec, Canada; and Cervo Brain Research Center, Québec, Canada
Blaise Balume Bakulikira, Department of Psychology, University of Goma, Goma, Congo, the Democratic Republic of the
Marie-Chantal Ingabire, School of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, Laval University, Québec, Canada; and Cervo Brain Research Center, Québec, Canada
Eric Kankunda Moket, Department of Psychology, University of Goma, Goma, Congo, the Democratic Republic of the
Serge Caparos, Department of Psychology, DysCo Laboratory, University Paris 8, France

Abstract

Having good measures of executive functions in general and of working memory (WM) in particular is very important, as these cognitive functions are associated with numerous consequential outcomes. Because few studies have examined WM in underprivileged populations exposed to high levels of adversity, including chronic armed conflicts and frequent natural disasters, the relevance of WM assessments in this context is still unknown. Our general objective was to examine the usefulness and usability of simple digit span measures of WM in contexts of high adversity, in North Kivu, in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, specifically by investigating links with formal schooling and other cognitive measures, as well as test–retest reliability. We conducted two studies. The first study included 97 internally displaced participants recently exposed to an upsurge in armed conflicts. In the second study, 281 participants were tested shortly after the eruption of the Nyaragongo volcano, and 115 of them were tested again 8 weeks after. We used the forward digit span, backward digit span and instruments measuring functional impairments and everyday cognitive skills. Performance on the digit span was associated with the level of schooling as well as everyday mathematical problem-solving and self-reported functional cognitive impairments. The results also showed a relatively strong stability of the forward digit span scores over an 8-week period.
Contribution: Results of these studies support the usefulness of a simple digit span measure to study one important aspect of executive function in contexts of high adversity.


Keywords

executive function; short-term memory; democratic Republic of Congo; cognition; armed conflicts; natural disasters

Sustainable Development Goal

Goal 3: Good health and well-being

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