Literature DB >> 9421571

What underlies the deficit in reported recollective experience in old age?

T J Perfect1, Z R Dasgupta.   

Abstract

In recognition memory, older adults report fewer occasions on which recognition is accompanied by recollection of the original encoding context. This study asks why this occurs. Two main hypotheses were tested: (1) Older adults fail to encode the items sufficiently when first they experience them. (2) Older adults have a retrieval deficit that prevents efficient reintegration of target and context. In addition, the hypothesis that frontal lobe integrity is essential for recollective experience was examined. Twenty older (mean age 70.7 years) and 20 younger (mean age 22.9 years) adults were asked to study a list of items and to verbalize the strategies they were using to remember. A further 20 older adults (mean age 70.0 years) were tested without the think-aloud protocol. Subsequently, subjects completed a battery of psychometric tests before completing a recognition test. As expected, older adults showed less recollective experience. They differed from the young in how they encoded the material, and once this difference was accounted for, no age differences in recollective experience remained. There was little evidence to support the hypothesis that frontal lobe integrity plays a role in the reduction of recollective experience with age.

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9421571     DOI: 10.3758/bf03211329

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mem Cognit        ISSN: 0090-502X


  16 in total

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6.  Age differences in reported recollective experience are due to encoding effects, not response bias.

Authors:  T J Perfect; R B Williams; C Anderton-Brown
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10.  Deficits in strategy application following frontal lobe damage in man.

Authors:  T Shallice; P W Burgess
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  21 in total

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7.  The Effects of Age on the Neural Correlates of Recollection Success, Recollection-Related Cortical Reinstatement, and Post-Retrieval Monitoring.

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Review 9.  The effects of healthy aging, amnestic mild cognitive impairment, and Alzheimer's disease on recollection and familiarity: a meta-analytic review.

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10.  Aging reduces veridical remembering but increases false remembering: neuropsychological test correlates of remember-know judgments.

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