Older adults can use memory for distinctive objects, but not distinctive scenes, to rescue associative memory deficits.

IF 1.6 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-01-26 DOI:10.1080/13825585.2023.2170966
Nichole R Bouffard, Celia Fidalgo, Iva K Brunec, Andy C H Lee, Morgan D Barense
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Abstract

Associative memory deficits in aging are frequently characterized by false recognition of novel stimulus associations, particularly when stimuli are similar. Introducing distinctive stimuli, therefore, can help guide item differentiation in memory and can further our understanding of how age-related brain changes impact behavior. How older adults use different types of distinctive information to distinguish overlapping events in memory and to avoid false associative recognition is still unknown. To test this, we manipulated the distinctiveness of items from two stimulus categories, scenes and objects, across three conditions: (1) distinct scenes paired with similar objects, (2) similar scenes paired with distinct objects, and (3) similar scenes paired with similar objects. Young and older adults studied scene-object pairs and then made both remember/know judgments toward single items as well as associative memory judgments to old and novel scene-object pairs ("Were these paired together?"). Older adults showed intact single item recognition of scenes and objects, regardless of whether those objects and scenes were similar or distinct. In contrast, relative to younger adults, older adults showed elevated false recognition for scene-object pairs, even when the scenes were distinct. These age-related associative memory deficits, however, disappeared if the pair contained an object that was visually distinct. In line with neural evidence that hippocampal functioning and scene processing decline with age, these results suggest that older adults can rely on memory for distinct objects, but not for distinct scenes, to distinguish between memories with overlapping features.

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老年人可以利用对独特物体的记忆,但不能利用对独特场景的记忆来挽救联想记忆的缺陷。
衰老过程中的联想记忆障碍经常表现为对新刺激联想的错误识别,尤其是当刺激物相似时。因此,引入与众不同的刺激有助于引导记忆中的项目区分,并能让我们进一步了解与年龄相关的大脑变化是如何影响行为的。老年人如何利用不同类型的独特信息来区分记忆中的重叠事件并避免错误的联想识别仍是一个未知数。为了测试这一点,我们在三种条件下对场景和物体这两种刺激类别中的项目的独特性进行了操作:(1)独特的场景与相似的物体配对;(2)相似的场景与独特的物体配对;以及(3)相似的场景与相似的物体配对。年轻和年长的成年人研究场景-物体配对,然后对单个项目进行记忆/知道判断,并对新旧场景-物体配对进行联想记忆判断("这些是否配对在一起?)老年人对场景和物体的单项识别表现完好,无论这些物体和场景是相似还是不同。相反,与年轻人相比,老年人对场景-物体配对的错误识别率较高,即使场景是不同的。然而,如果场景-物体对中包含一个视觉上不同的物体,这些与年龄相关的联想记忆缺陷就会消失。有神经学证据表明,海马功能和场景处理能力会随着年龄的增长而下降,与此相一致,这些结果表明,老年人可以依靠对不同物体的记忆,而不是对不同场景的记忆,来区分具有重叠特征的记忆。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
52
期刊介绍: The purposes of Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition are to (a) publish research on both the normal and dysfunctional aspects of cognitive development in adulthood and aging, and (b) promote the integration of theories, methods, and research findings between the fields of cognitive gerontology and neuropsychology. The primary emphasis of the journal is to publish original empirical research. Occasionally, theoretical or methodological papers, critical reviews of a content area, or theoretically relevant case studies will also be published.
期刊最新文献
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