1. No Evidence for Improved Associative Memory Performance Following Process-Based Associative Memory Training in Older Adults
- Author
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Bellander, Martin, Eschen, Anne, Lövdén, Martin, Martin, Mike, Bäckman, Lars, Brehmer, Yvonne, University of Zurich, and Brehmer, Yvonne
- Subjects
2805 Cognitive Neuroscience ,cognitive training ,associative memory ,1302 Aging ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,older adults ,transfer ,episodic memory ,education ,UFSP13-4 Dynamics of Healthy Aging ,150 Psychology - Abstract
Studies attempting to improve episodic memory performance with strategy instructions and training have had limited success in older adults: their training gains are limited in comparison to those of younger adults and do not generalize to untrained tasks and contexts. This limited success has been partly attributed to age-related impairments in associative binding of information into coherent episodes. We therefore investigated potential training and transfer effects of process-based associative memory training (i.e., repeated practice). Thirty-nine older adults (Mage = 68.8) underwent 6 weeks of either adaptive associative memory training or item recognition training. Both groups improved performance in item memory, spatial memory (object-context binding) and reasoning. A disproportionate effect of associative memory training was only observed for item memory, whereas no training-related performance changes were observed for associative memory. Self-reported strategies showed no signs of spontaneous development of memory-enhancing associative memory strategies. Hence, the results do not support the hypothesis that process-based associative memory training leads to higher associative memory performance in older adults., Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, 8, ISSN:1663-4365
- Published
- 2017
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