Literature DB >> 34291964

Looking the same, but remembering differently: Preserved eye-movement synchrony with age during movie watching.

Emily E Davis1, Emily Chemnitz2, Tyler K Collins1, Linda Geerligs3, Karen L Campbell1.   

Abstract

Naturalistic stimuli (e.g., movies) provide the opportunity to study lifelike experiences in the lab. While young adults respond to these stimuli in a highly synchronized manner [as indexed by intersubject correlations (ISC) in their neural activity], older adults respond more idiosyncratically. Here, we examine whether eye-movement synchrony (eye-ISC) also declines with age during movie-watching and whether it relates to memory for the movie. Our results show no age-related decline in eye-ISC, suggesting that age differences in neural ISC are not caused by differences in viewing patterns. Both age groups recalled the same number of episodic details from the movie, but older adults recalled proportionally fewer episodic details due to their greater output of semantic and false information. In both age groups, higher eye-ISC related to a higher proportion of internal details and a lower proportion of false information being recalled. Finally, both older and younger adults showed better cued recall for cues taken from within the same event than those spanning an event boundary, further confirming that events are stored in long-term memory as discrete units with stronger associations within than across event boundaries. Taken together, these findings suggest that naturalistic stimuli drive perception in a similar way in younger and older adults, but age differences in neural synchrony further up the information processing stream may contribute to subtle differences in event memory. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

Year:  2021        PMID: 34291964     DOI: 10.1037/pag0000615

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Aging        ISSN: 0882-7974


  2 in total

1.  A partially nested cortical hierarchy of neural states underlies event segmentation in the human brain.

Authors:  Linda Geerligs; Dora Gözükara; Djamari Oetringer; Karen L Campbell; Marcel van Gerven; Umut Güçlü
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2022-09-16       Impact factor: 8.713

2.  A studyforrest extension, MEG recordings while watching the audio-visual movie "Forrest Gump".

Authors:  Xingyu Liu; Yuxuan Dai; Hailun Xie; Zonglei Zhen
Journal:  Sci Data       Date:  2022-05-13       Impact factor: 8.501

  2 in total

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