Regularity effect in prospective memory during aging

Geoffrey Blondelle, M. Hainselin, Y. Gounden, L. Heurley, H. Voisin, O. Megalakaki, Estelle Bressous, V. Quaglino
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Background Regularity effect can affect performance in prospective memory (PM), but little is known on the cognitive processes linked to this effect. Moreover, its impacts with regard to aging remain unknown. To our knowledge, this study is the first to examine regularity effect in PM in a lifespan perspective, with a sample of young, intermediate, and older adults. Objective and design Our study examined the regularity effect in PM in three groups of participants: 28 young adults (18–30), 16 intermediate adults (40–55), and 25 older adults (65–80). The task, adapted from the Virtual Week, was designed to manipulate the regularity of the various activities of daily life that were to be recalled (regular repeated activities vs. irregular non-repeated activities). We examine the role of several cognitive functions including certain dimensions of executive functions (planning, inhibition, shifting, and binding), short-term memory, and retrospective episodic memory to identify those involved in PM, according to regularity and age. Results A mixed-design ANOVA showed a main effect of task regularity and an interaction between age and regularity: an age-related difference in PM performances was found for irregular activities (older < young), but not for regular activities. All participants recalled more regular activities than irregular ones with no age effect. It appeared that recalling of regular activities only involved planning for both intermediate and older adults, while recalling of irregular ones were linked to planning, inhibition, short-term memory, binding, and retrospective episodic memory. Conclusion Taken together, our data suggest that planning capacities seem to play a major role in remembering to perform intended actions with advancing age. Furthermore, the age-PM-paradox may be attenuated when the experimental design is adapted by implementing a familiar context through the use of activities of daily living. The clinical implications of regularity effect are discussed.
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衰老过程中前瞻记忆的规律性效应
背景规则效应可以影响前瞻记忆(PM)的表现,但对与此效应相关的认知过程知之甚少。此外,它对衰老的影响尚不清楚。据我们所知,这项研究是第一次从生命周期的角度研究PM的规律性影响,样本包括年轻人、中年人和老年人。目的和设计本研究检测了三组参与者PM的规律性效应:28名年轻人(18-30岁),16名中年人(40-55岁)和25名老年人(65-80岁)。该任务改编自虚拟周,旨在操纵日常生活中要回忆的各种活动的规律性(有规律的重复活动与不规律的不重复活动)。我们研究了几种认知功能的作用,包括执行功能的某些维度(计划、抑制、转移和结合)、短期记忆和回顾性情景记忆,以根据规律性和年龄确定与PM有关的认知功能。结果混合设计方差分析显示了任务规律性的主要影响以及年龄和规律性之间的相互作用:在不规律的活动(老年人<年轻人)中发现了PM表现的年龄相关差异,而在常规活动中则没有。在没有年龄影响的情况下,所有参与者都能回忆起更多有规律的活动。结果表明,对于中老年人来说,回忆有规律的活动只与计划有关,而回忆不规律的活动则与计划、抑制、短期记忆、约束和回顾性情景记忆有关。综上所述,我们的数据表明,随着年龄的增长,计划能力似乎在记住执行预期行动方面发挥了重要作用。此外,当实验设计通过使用日常生活活动实现熟悉的环境时,年龄- pm悖论可能会减弱。讨论了规律效应的临床意义。
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