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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Inefficient Encoding as an Explanation for Age-Related Deficits in Recollection-Based Processing
Ist Teil von
  • Journal of psychophysiology, 2014-01, Vol.28 (3), p.148-161
Ort / Verlag
Hogrefe Publishing
Erscheinungsjahr
2014
Quelle
EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • A cardinal feature of aging is a decline in episodic memory (EM). Nevertheless, there is evidence that some older adults may be able to "compensate" for failures in recollection-based processing by recruiting brain regions and cognitive processes not normally recruited by the young. We review the evidence suggesting that age-related declines in EM performance and recollection-related brain activity (left-parietal EM effect; LPEM) are due to altered processing at encoding. We describe results from our laboratory on differences in encoding- and retrieval-related activity between young and older adults. We then show that, relative to the young, in older adults brain activity at encoding is reduced over a brain region believed to be crucial for successful semantic elaboration in a 400-1,400-ms interval (left inferior prefrontal cortex, LIPFC; Johnson, Nessler, & Friedman, 2013; Nessler, Friedman, Johnson, & Bersick, 2007; Nessler, Johnson, Bersick, & Friedman, 2006). This reduced brain activity is associated with diminished subsequent recognition-memory performance and the LPEM at retrieval. We provide evidence for this premise by demonstrating that disrupting encoding-related processes during this 400-1,400-ms interval in young adults affords causal support for the hypothesis that the reduction over LIPFC during encoding produces the hallmarks of an age-related EM deficit: normal semantic retrieval at encoding, reduced subsequent episodic recognition accuracy, free recall, and the LPEM. Finally, we show that the reduced LPEM in young adults is associated with "additional" brain activity over similar brain areas as those activated when older adults show deficient retrieval. Hence, rather than supporting the compensation hypothesis, these data are more consistent with the scaffolding hypothesis, in which the recruitment of additional cognitive processes is an adaptive response across the life span in the face of momentary increases in task demand due to poorly-encoded episodic memories.
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISSN: 0269-8803
eISSN: 2151-2124
DOI: 10.1027/0269-8803/a000122
Titel-ID: cdi_proquest_journals_1562458426

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