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Preservation of Episodic Visual Recognition Memory in Aging

(Robert Sekuler, Michael J. Kahana, Chris McLaughlin, Julie Golomb and Arthur Wingfield)

Introduction

  • Given: Rehearsable stimuli (such as words, letters, or sentences) is associated with diminished short-term memory with increasing age.
  • Hypothesis: Tasks that involve visual stimuli will not be associated with diminished STM as age increases.

Brief Description of Study

  • 2 study stimuli per trial followed by a probe stimulus.
  • To better reveal the age-related differences in visual memory, the task was more challenging:
    •  Subjects were asked to encode to independent attributes:
      • Two separate sinusoidal gratings (one vertical grating and one horizontal) — randomly varied.

Method

  • 15 younger adults, 15 older adults, equivalent in health, and post High School education.
  • Example Trial (back of page):
    • Saw 2 separate study stimuli.
    • Followed by a pre-probe delay.
      • The pre-probe delay varied from 1, 2, & 4 seconds to compare the rate at which information was lost from memory.
    • Probe presented.
    • Participant had to indicate if the probe presented was in one of the study stimuli.
    • A tone immediately followed indicating their accuracy.

Results

  • The two groups did not differ significantly in recognition accuracy.
    • Young mean of correct responses was .68.
    • Older mean of correct responses was .66.
  • Effect of probe’s spatial frequency did not differ between groups.
  • Accuracy was poorest when the probe’s frequency was in between stimulus 1 & 2.
  • Reaction times after probe were statistically significant, p < .02.

 

Conclusions

  • Older adults took significantly longer to make their recognition judgments.
  • Accuracy was not different between younger and older adults.
  • Between-trial variation in the critical orientation had no effect on response accuracy of RT.
  • When visual memory is assessed in healthy older adults tested under conditions decreasing effects of age-related changes in vision, visual recognition memory seems to be unaffected by aging. 

 

 

Robin Streit

Memory & Aging Lab

Presentation – December 5, 2007

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