| Literature DB >> 35795236 |
Monika Toth1, Anke Sambeth1, Arjan Blokland1.
Abstract
Age-related memory problems posit a growing concern in our society. This study investigated the impact of age and memory strength on recognition memory of pre-experimentally unfamiliar abstract figures and non-words. We applied a three-phase old/new recognition memory paradigm and manipulated memory strength as a function of the Levels of Processing (deep vs. shallow) and repetition. Older adults relative to the young showed impairment in the correct identification of new items. As indicated by the lower discriminability indexes, the older adults also had difficulties discriminating the strongly (drawn/semantically processed) and the weakly (studied) embedded abstract figures but not the non-words. Age-related differences in reaction times were only evident with the abstract figures. Finally, our results revealed that the recognition performance was equally affected by memory strength in both age groups. The current findings agree with previous research on age-related impairment in new item recognition, which can be attributed to misrecollection and decreased sensitivity to novelty in the older adults than the young. The detected age effects on the discriminability of the drawn and studied abstract figures agree with the age-related impairment in the perceptual encoding hypothesis and support the notion related to the need for environmental support to reduce age effects. The lack of age effects with the non-words indicates that age effects on discriminability are stimulus-dependent. The current results support the notion that recognition memory in aging is only impaired under certain conditions and depends on the stimuli used.Entities:
Keywords: abstract figures; cognitive aging; discrimination; non-words; recognition memory
Year: 2022 PMID: 35795236 PMCID: PMC9250999 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2022.915055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.702
Figure 1Examples of the stimuli used.
Figure 2Schematic overview of the experimental design. Phase 1: deep memorization with the pre-experimentally unfamiliar abstract figures and non-words in separate tests using a mnemonic encoding task (redrawing the abstract figures and mentioning rhyming words for the non-words). The 30 stimuli used here form List 1 (drawn/semantically processed stimuli). Phase 2: shallow memorization with the instruction to remember as many stimuli as possible. This phase contained items from List 1 and 30 new ones (List 2, studied stimuli). Phase 3: recognition of the stimuli including List 1, List 2, and 30 new (List 3). N: number of stimuli presented (Toth et al., 2021a).
Overview of the different types of responses as a function of stimulus type.
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| Hit (H) | Drawn or semantically processed/Studied | “Old” |
| Miss (M) | Drawn or semantically processed/Studied | “New” |
| Correct Rejection (CR) | New | “New” |
| False Alarm (FA) | New | “Old” |
| Hit Rate (HR) | Drawn or semantically processed/Studied | H/(H + M) |
| Correct Rejection Rate (CRR) | New | CR/(CR + FA) |
The overall number of old and new responses during the recognition phase Data represent the means (SEM) of the total “old” and “new” responses and the corresponding % compared to the 90 items/stimulus category (abstract figures and non-words), and the t-statistics for the young and the older adults.
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| “Old” | 48.40 (2.53) 54% | 43.47 (2.18) 48% | 49.23 (2.12) 55% | 47.85 (3.76) 53% |
| “New” | 41.53 (2.54) 46% | 46.40 (2.20) 52% | 40.46 (2.02) 45% | 42.00 (3.75) 47% |
| Paired samples | ||||
| t-test | t(14) = 1.36, | t(14) = 0.67, | t(12) = 2.12, | t(12) = 0.78, |
Means (SEMs) of the signal-detection measures concerning the recognition performance with the abstract figures and non-words for the drawn/semantically processed, studied, and new stimuli according to age (young and older adults).
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| Drawn/Semantically processed | HR | 0.98 (0.01) | 0.80 (0.04) | 0.94 (0.12) | 0.83 (0.02) |
| A' | 0.90 (0.10) | 0.69 (0.02) | 0.76 (0.03) * | 0.62. (0.01) | |
| Studied | HR | 0.57 (0.06) | 0.50 (0.04) | 0.52 (0.05) | 0.57 (0.05) |
| A' | 0.63 (0.03) | 0.56 (0.01) | 0.56 (0.01) *, | 0.55 (0.01) | |
| New | CRR | 0.95 (0.01) | 0.84 (0.02) | 0.80 (0.04) *, | 0.70 (0.02) * |
HR, hit rate; CRR, correct rejection rate; A': discriminability index. Age effects: .
Figure 3Recognition accuracy performance of the abstract figures (A) and the non-words (B) according to age (young and older adults) for the hit rates of the drawn/semantically processed and studied items, and the correct rejection rates in repose to the new items. The bars represent the means. Age effects: *: p < 0.05. Stimulus type effects: aa: p < 0.001.
Median reaction times (middle 50% range; in milliseconds in response to the abstract figures and non-words (the drawn/semantically processed, studied, and new) and their corresponding first and third interquartile ranges for the young and the older adults.
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| Drawn/Semantically processed | 661 (613-742) | 648 (636-665) | 911 | 659 (627-790) |
| Studied | 794aa (718-1011) | 650 (575-719) | 1099 | 620 (578-651) |
| New | 811aa (734-953) | 689 (637-734) | 1149 | 684 |
Age effects: **p <0.001. Stimulus type effects: different from the drawn/semantically processed: aa p <0.001.