G. Sędek, P. Verhaeghen, Kamila Lengsfeld, Klara Rydzewska
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引用次数: 0
摘要
众所周知,老年人在形式推理测试中有困难。受先前研究表明参与者的生活生态对推理能力的影响的启发,我们对270名年轻人、中年人和老年人进行了研究,以非正式的叙事故事而不是正式的问题来呈现传递性推理问题(即,a > B, B > C,因此a > C)是否可以缓解与年龄相关的衰退。正式材料导致了通常的(强烈的)年龄相关差异,有利于年轻人。相比之下,当使用非正式的口头叙述并消除所有时间压力时,成年人的年龄差异就被有效地消除了,可能是因为这些任务现在允许更容易地编码和提取情景记忆。这表明,当使用标准测试程序时,老年人的现实推理能力被严重低估了。
Using stories to assess linear reasoning abolishes the age-related differences found in formal tests
Abstract Older adults are known to have difficulty with tests of formal reasoning. Inspired by previous work suggesting an influence of participants’ living ecology on reasoning ability, we examined in a group of 270 younger, middle-aged, and older adults whether presenting transitive reasoning problems (i.e., A > B, B > C, hence A > C) as informal narrative stories rather than formal problems might alleviate age-related declines. Formal materials resulted in the usual (strong) age-related differences favouring the young. In contrast, when informal spoken narratives were used and additionally all time pressure was removed, adult age differences were effectively abolished, possibly because the tasks now allow for easier encoding into and retrieval from episodic memory. This suggests that older adults’ real-life reasoning abilities are seriously underestimated when standard testing procedures are used.