| Literature DB >> 26539106 |
Fátima Alves1, Flávia Resende1, Maria Salomé Pinho1.
Abstract
The diversion paradigm was created in the context of explaining the effect of the instruction to forget some recently encoded material in the list-method of the directed forgetting paradigm. The current study of healthy older adults employed the diversion paradigm with two main goals: to determine whether thinking about an autobiographical memory interferes with the recall of recently encoded information and to explore whether the degree of forgetting depends on the temporal distance created by the diversionary thought. Ninety non-institutionalized Portuguese older adults (47 females and 43 males), aged 65-69 years, with education levels of between 3 and 6 years participated in this study. The exclusion criteria were as follows: presence of depressive symptomatology (assessed with the Geriatric Depression Scale-30) and global cognitive deterioration (assessed with the Mini-Mental State Examination). Concerning the diversion paradigm, one group was instructed to think about an autobiographical event (remembering one's childhood home or the last party that one had attended) after studying one word list (List 1) and before viewing the second word list (List 2). After a brief distraction task, the participant had to recall the words from both of the studied lists. In the control group, the procedure was the same, but the diversionary thought was substituted by a speed reading task. The obtained results showed the amnesic effect of diversionary thought but did not show a greater degree of forgetting when the autobiographical events in the diversionary thoughts were temporally more distant. Considering the practical implications of these results, this study alerts us to the importance of promoting strategies that enable older adults to better remember important information and effectively forget irrelevant information.Entities:
Keywords: amnesic effect; autobiographical memories; diversion paradigm; free recall; older adults
Year: 2015 PMID: 26539106 PMCID: PMC4612496 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2015.00189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Cognitive status, depressive symptomatology and vocabulary scores of the participants in the experimental and control conditions.
| Experimental conditions | Control condition | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The childhood home | The last party | |||||
| MMSE | 27.63 | 1.35 | 28.43 | 1.33 | 28.13 | 1.33 |
| GDS-30 | 6.70 | 2.26 | 5.80 | 2.02 | 6.53 | 1.93 |
| Vocabulary | 37.27 | 9.35 | 38.77 | 8.39 | 39.73 | 9.28 |
Proportion of correct recall of both lists for experimental and control conditions.
| List 1 | List 2 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The childhood home | 0.14 | 0.09 | 0.22 | 0.11 |
| The last party | 0.13 | 0.07 | 0.21 | 0.15 |
| 0.20 | 0.09 | 0.21 | 0.15 | |