Age-Related differences in the relationship between sustained attention and associative memory and Memory-Guided inference.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Tammy T Tran, Kevin P Madore, Kaitlyn E Tobin, Sophia H Block, Vyash Puliyadi, Shaw C Hsu, Alison R Preston, Arnold Bakker, Anthony D Wagner
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Episodic memory enables the encoding and retrieval of novel associations, as well as the bridging across learned associations to draw novel inferences. A fundamental goal of memory science is to understand the factors that give rise to individual and age-related differences in memory-dependent cognition. Variability in episodic memory could arise, in part, from both individual differences in sustained attention and diminished attention in aging. We first report that, relative to young adults (N = 23; M = 20.0 years), older adults (N = 26, M = 68.7 years) demonstrated lower associative memory and memory-guided associative inference performance and that this age-related reduction in associative inference occurs even when controlling for associative memory performance. Next, we confirm these age-related memory differences by using a high-powered, online replication study (young adults: N = 143, M = 26.2 years; older adults N = 133, M = 67.7 years), further demonstrating that age-related differences in memory do not reflect group differences in sustained attention (as assayed by the gradual-onset continuous performance task; gradCPT). Finally, we report that individual differences in sustained attention explain between-person variability in associative memory and inference performance in the present, online young adult sample, but not in the older adult sample. These findings extend understanding of the links between attention and memory in young adults, demonstrating that differences in sustained attention was related to differences in memory-guided inference. By contrast, our data suggest that the present age-related differences in memory-dependent behavior and the memory differences between older adults are due to attention-independent mechanisms.

外显记忆能够对新的联想进行编码和检索,并在已学过的联想之间架起桥梁,从而得出新的推论。记忆科学的一个基本目标是了解在依赖记忆的认知中产生个体差异和年龄差异的因素。外显记忆的差异可能部分源于持续注意力的个体差异和衰老过程中注意力的减弱。我们首先报告了相对于年轻人(N = 23;M = 20.0 岁),老年人(N = 26;M = 68.7 岁)的联想记忆和记忆引导的联想推理能力较低,而且即使控制了联想记忆能力,这种与年龄相关的联想推理能力的下降也会发生。接下来,我们通过一项高功率的在线重复研究(年轻成人:N = 143,M = 26.2 岁;老年成人 N = 133,M = 67.7 岁)证实了这些与年龄相关的记忆差异,进一步证明了与年龄相关的记忆差异并不反映持续注意力的群体差异(通过渐进式持续表现任务进行评估;gradCPT)。最后,我们报告说,持续注意力的个体差异可以解释当前在线青年成人样本中联想记忆和推理成绩的人际差异,但不能解释老年成人样本中的人际差异。这些发现拓展了人们对青壮年注意力与记忆之间联系的理解,证明了持续注意力的差异与记忆引导推理的差异有关。相比之下,我们的数据表明,目前与年龄相关的记忆依赖行为差异和老年人之间的记忆差异是由注意力无关机制造成的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
3.40%
发文量
64
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience (CABN) offers theoretical, review, and primary research articles on behavior and brain processes in humans. Coverage includes normal function as well as patients with injuries or processes that influence brain function: neurological disorders, including both healthy and disordered aging; and psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and depression. CABN is the leading vehicle for strongly psychologically motivated studies of brain–behavior relationships, through the presentation of papers that integrate psychological theory and the conduct and interpretation of the neuroscientific data. The range of topics includes perception, attention, memory, language, problem solving, reasoning, and decision-making; emotional processes, motivation, reward prediction, and affective states; and individual differences in relevant domains, including personality. Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience is a publication of the Psychonomic Society.
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