| Literature DB >> 18671167 |
Amanda L Gilchrist1, Nelson Cowan, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin.
Abstract
Previous studies show that older adults have poorer immediate recall for language but the reason is unknown. Older adults may recall fewer chunks from working memory, or may have difficulty binding words together to form multi-unit chunks. We examined these two hypotheses by presenting four types of spoken sentences for immediate free recall, differing in the number and length of chunks per trial: four short, simple sentences; eight such sentences; four compound sentences, each incorporating two meaningful, short sentences; and four random word lists, each under a sentence-like intonation. Older adults recalled words from (accessed) fewer clauses than young adults, but there was no ageing deficit in the degree of completion of clauses that were accessed. An age-related decline in working memory capacity measured in chunks appears to account for deficits in memory for spoken language.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18671167 PMCID: PMC2610466 DOI: 10.1080/09658210802261124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Memory ISSN: 0965-8211