| Literature DB >> 32942952 |
Tarek Amer1, K W Joan Ngo2,3, Jennifer C Weeks2,3, Lynn Hasher2,3.
Abstract
Reduced attentional control with age is associated with the processing and maintenance of task-irrelevant information in memory. Yet the nature of these memory representations remains unclear. We present evidence that, relative to younger adults (n = 48), older adults (n = 48) both (a) store simultaneously presented target and irrelevant information as rich, bound memory representations and (b) spontaneously reactivate irrelevant information when presented with previously associated targets. In a three-stage implicit reactivation paradigm, re-presenting a target picture that was previously paired with a distractor word spontaneously reactivated the previously associated word, making it become more accessible than an unreactivated distractor word in a subsequent implicit memory task. The accessibility of reactivated words, indexed by priming, was also greater than the degree of distractor priming shown by older adults in a control condition (n = 48). Thus, reduced attentional control influences the processing and representation of incoming information.Keywords: attention control; memory representations; open data; reactivation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32942952 DOI: 10.1177/0956797620951125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Sci ISSN: 0956-7976