Literature DB >> 19100756

Aging reduces veridical remembering but increases false remembering: neuropsychological test correlates of remember-know judgments.

David P McCabe1, Henry L Roediger, Mark A McDaniel, David A Balota.   

Abstract

In 1985 Tulving introduced the remember-know procedure, whereby subjects are asked to distinguish between memories that involve retrieval of contextual details (remembering) and memories that do not (knowing). Several studies have been reported showing age-related declines in remember hits, which has typically been interpreted as supporting dual-process theories of cognitive aging that align remembering with a recollection process and knowing with a familiarity process. Less attention has been paid to remember false alarms, or their relation to age. We reviewed the literature examining aging and remember/know judgments and show that age-related increases in remember false alarms, i.e., false remembering, are as reliable as age-related decreases in remember hits, i.e., veridical remembering. Moreover, a meta-analysis showed that the age effect size for remember hits and false alarms are similar, and larger than age effects on know hits and false alarms. We also show that the neuropsychological correlates of remember hits and false alarms differ. Neuropsychological tests of medial-temporal lobe functioning were related to remember hits, but tests of frontal-lobe functioning and age were not. By contrast, age and frontal-lobe functioning predicted unique variance in remember false alarms, but MTL functioning did not. We discuss various explanations for these findings and conclude that any comprehensive explanation of recollective experience will need to account for the processes underlying both remember hits and false alarms.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19100756      PMCID: PMC3319377          DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2008.11.025

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  56 in total

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5.  The effect of forced recall on illusory recollection in younger and older adults.

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6.  False recollection induced by photographs: a comparison of older and younger adults.

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  31 in total

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Authors:  Marcia K Johnson; Brice A Kuhl; Karen J Mitchell; Elizabeth Ankudowich; Kelly A Durbin
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4.  The role of extralist associations in false remembering: a source misattribution account.

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5.  Retrieval Expectations Affect False Recollection: Insights from a Criterial Recollection Task.

Authors:  David A Gallo
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6.  The Effects of Age on the Neural Correlates of Recollection Success, Recollection-Related Cortical Reinstatement, and Post-Retrieval Monitoring.

Authors:  Tracy H Wang; Jeffrey D Johnson; Marianne de Chastelaine; Brian E Donley; Michael D Rugg
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2015-01-28       Impact factor: 5.357

7.  Cognitive Reserve Moderates Older Adults' Memory Errors in Autobiographical Reality Monitoring Task.

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8.  Autobiographical memory conjunction errors in younger and older adults: Evidence for a role of inhibitory ability.

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9.  What's the gist? The influence of schemas on the neural correlates underlying true and false memories.

Authors:  Christina E Webb; Indira C Turney; Nancy A Dennis
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2016-09-30       Impact factor: 3.139

10.  Recollection, not familiarity, decreases in healthy ageing: Converging evidence from four estimation methods.

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Journal:  Memory       Date:  2014-12-08
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