Literature DB >> 19590991

Discriminating semantic from episodic relatedness in young and older adults.

Meredith M Patterson1, Leah L Light, Jeffrey C Van Ocker, Darlene Olfman.   

Abstract

The ability of young (aged 18-30) and older (aged 60-80) adults to discriminate pre-experimental (semantic) from experimental (episodic) associations was examined. Participants studied a list containing semantically related and unrelated word pairs and then made either associative recognition (Experiments 1a and b) or semantic relatedness (Experiment 2) judgments at various response deadlines. For associative recognition judgments, both young and older adults benefited from semantic relatedness, leading to more hits for related than unrelated pairs, and at the long response deadline, older adults' performance on those pairs matched that of young participants. Also, both young and older adults demonstrated superior discrimination for unrelated lures whose members had originally been studied in related pairs - evidence for recall-to-reject processing in both age groups. In making semantic relatedness judgments, both young and older adults showed an episodic priming effect. When older adults can rely on long-standing associations, their performance resembles that of young adults - both in associative recognition and in episodic priming.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19590991     DOI: 10.1080/13825580902866638

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn        ISSN: 1382-5585


  6 in total

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4.  Under the condition of unitization at encoding rather than unitization at retrieval, familiarity could support associative recognition and the relationship between unitization and recollection was moderated by unitization-congruence.

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Journal:  Learn Mem       Date:  2020-02-18       Impact factor: 2.460

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Journal:  Front Behav Neurosci       Date:  2013-06-14       Impact factor: 3.558

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  6 in total

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