Literature DB >> 2137869

Adult age differences in memory in relation to availability and accessibility of knowledge-based schemas.

T Y Arbuckle1, V F Vanderleck, M Harsany, S Lapidus.   

Abstract

Three experiments investigated whether, over adulthood, the use of schemas to process and remember new information increases (developmental shift hypothesis), decreases (production deficiency hypothesis) or remains constant (age-invariance hypothesis). Effects of schema access were studied by having young, middle-aged, and old music experts and nonexperts recall information that was relevant or irrelevant to music (Experiment 1) and by comparing young and old participants' memory for prose passages when they knew or did not know the subject of the passage (Experiments 2 and 3). In each case, schema access facilitated memory equally across age levels, supporting the age-invariance hypothesis and implying that the basic structures and operations of memory do not necessarily change with age. Possible limits on the independence of age and schema utilization were considered in relation to the conditions under which each of the two alternative hypotheses might hold.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2137869     DOI: 10.1037//0278-7393.16.2.305

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn        ISSN: 0278-7393            Impact factor:   3.051


  14 in total

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2.  Contextual knowledge reduces demands on working memory during reading.

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Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2006-09

Review 3.  Aging and situation model processing.

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Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2007-12

4.  Competing cues: Older adults rely on knowledge in the face of fluency.

Authors:  Nadia M Brashier; Sharda Umanath; Roberto Cabeza; Elizabeth J Marsh
Journal:  Psychol Aging       Date:  2017-03-23

5.  To catch a Snitch: Brain potentials reveal variability in the functional organization of (fictional) world knowledge during reading.

Authors:  Melissa Troyer; Marta Kutas
Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2020-02-25       Impact factor: 3.059

6.  Adults with Poor Reading Skills, Older Adults, and College Students: the Meanings They Understand During Reading Using a Diffusion Model Analysis.

Authors:  Gail McKoon; Roger Ratcliff
Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2018-06-07       Impact factor: 3.059

7.  Aging and perceived event structure as a function of modality.

Authors:  Joseph Magliano; Kristopher Kopp; M Windy McNerney; Gabriel A Radvansky; Jeffrey M Zacks
Journal:  Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn       Date:  2011-12-19

8.  Age differences in the effects of domain knowledge on reading efficiency.

Authors:  Lisa M Soederberg Miller
Journal:  Psychol Aging       Date:  2009-03

9.  Contribution of prior semantic knowledge to new episodic learning in amnesia.

Authors:  Irene P Kan; Michael P Alexander; Mieke Verfaellie
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2009-05       Impact factor: 3.225

10.  Event segmentation ability uniquely predicts event memory.

Authors:  Jesse Q Sargent; Jeffrey M Zacks; David Z Hambrick; Rose T Zacks; Christopher A Kurby; Heather R Bailey; Michelle L Eisenberg; Taylor M Beck
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2013-08-14
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