“…Similarly, and in line with preceding evidence, results from Experiment 2 showed that WM capacity is also related to non-native language achievement, at least at intermediate levels of proficiency. It has been previously shown that WM capacity is highly correlated not just with general reading comprehension, but with general reasoning abilities ( Daneman and Carpenter, 1980 ; Turner and Engle, 1989 ; Kyllonen and Christal, 1990 ), mathematical processing ( Ashcraft, 1995 ; Gathercole and Pickering, 2000 ; Lee and Kang, 2002 ; Kyttälä and Lehto, 2008 ) and attentional control, among other cognitive skills ( Barrett et al, 2004 ; Wright et al, 2014 ). In that sense, WM capacity was also positively related with good reading achievement at intermediate levels of proficiency, but not at lower levels, suggesting that this factor could play a different role at different stages of language learning.…”