1. Semantic Congruence Drives Long-Term Memory and Similarly Affects Neural Retrieval Dynamics in Young and Older Adults
- Author
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Ricardo J. Alejandro, Pau A. Packard, Tineke K. Steiger, Lluis Fuentemilla, and Nico Bunzeck
- Subjects
Aging ,AGE-RELATED DIFFERENCES ,congruence effect ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Old age ,Social Sciences ,EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS ,EPISODIC MEMORY ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,PREFRONTAL CORTEX ,Electroencephalography ,ALPHA OSCILLATIONS ,long-term memory ,Congruence (geometry) ,Memory ,Encoding (memory) ,medicine ,EEG ,Young adult ,Original Research ,Recognition memory ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Long-term memory ,aging ,THETA OSCILLATIONS ,PHASE SYNCHRONIZATION ,Focus (linguistics) ,ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE ,Vellesa ,Dynamics (music) ,RECOGNITION MEMORY ,Psychology ,CATEGORY NORMS ,ERP ,Neuroscience ,Cognitive psychology ,Memòria ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Learning novel information can be promoted if it is congruent with already stored knowledge. This so-called semantic congruence effect has been broadly studied in healthy young adults with a focus on neural encoding mechanisms. However, the impacts on retrieval, and possible impairments during healthy aging, which is typically associated with changes in declarative long-term memory, remain unclear. To investigate these issues, we used a previously established paradigm in healthy young and older humans with a focus on the neural activity at a final retrieval stage as measured with electroencephalography (EEG). In both age groups, semantic congruence at encoding enhanced subsequent long-term recognition memory of words. Compatible with this observation, semantic congruence led to differences in event-related potentials (ERPs) at retrieval, and this effect was not modulated by age. Specifically, congruence modulated old/new ERPs at a fronto-central (Fz) and left parietal (P3) electrode in a late (400–600 ms) time window, which has previously been associated with recognition memory processes. Importantly, ERPs to old items also correlated with the positive effect of semantic congruence on long-term memory independent of age. Together, our findings suggest that semantic congruence drives subsequent recognition memory across the lifespan through changes in neural retrieval processes.
- Published
- 2021
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