| Literature DB >> 22216046 |
Jung-Hae Youn1, Jun-Young Lee, Seolmin Kim, Seung-Ho Ryu.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: According to the increase of older people, the need for effective methods to maintain or improve cognitive functions in the elderly has increased. These cognitive enhancing methods may contribute to the prevention of elderly cognitive decline by aging and dementing illness as well. This study aimed to examine the effectiveness of multistrategic memory training with the metamemory concept on cognitive functions in the normal health elderly in Korea.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive aging; Memory training; Metamemory; Subjective memory complaints
Year: 2011 PMID: 22216046 PMCID: PMC3246144 DOI: 10.4306/pi.2011.8.4.354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatry Investig ISSN: 1738-3684 Impact factor: 2.505
The contents of each session of the training program
Baseline characteristics: demographic, cognitive and psychosocial characteristics
*mean (SD), †5 times of immediate recall of the learning word list, ‡the measures are test scores, not length of attention span. SD: standard deviation, SRFT: Simple Rey Figure Test, DST: Digit Span Test, VST: Visual Span Test, SMCQ: Subjective Memory Complaints Questionnaire, SGDS: Geriatric Depression Scale, short form
Comparisions between the intervention and control groups and effect of the memory training on outcome measures
amean (SD), b(95% CI), c5 times of immediate recall of the learning word list, deffect of the memory training program not controlling for depressive symptoms changes eeffect of the memory training program controlling for depressive symptoms changes, †p value from the intervention vs. control groups by time interactions. SD: standard deviation, CI: confidence interval, SRFT: Simple Rey Figure Test, DST: Digit Span Test, VST: Visual Span Test, SMCQ: Subjective Memory Complaints Questionnaire, SGDS: Geriatric Depression Scale, short form
Figure 1Pretaining and Posttraining estimated means with 95% confidence intervals (CI) and effect sizes (Cohen d). For each outcome measure, the p-value and Cohen d effect size estimate is from the training group (intervention vs. control group)×time interaction. A) p=0.024, d=0.68; B) p=0.020, d=0.66, C) p=0.042, d=0.88; D) p=0.003, d=0.92; E) p=0.009, d=0.65; F) p=0.025, d=0.42; G) p=0.001, d=0.15. SD: standard deviation.