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Differential Age Effects on Spatial and Visual Working Memory

Authors :
Sascha G. Morel
Roy P. C. Kessels
Joukje M. Oosterman
Albert Postma
Lisette Meijer
Cléo Buvens
Source :
International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 73, 3, pp. 195-208, International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 73, 195-208
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2011.

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext The present study was intended to compare age effects on visual and spatial working memory by using two versions of the same task that differed only in presentation mode. The working memory task contained both a simultaneous and a sequential presentation mode condition, reflecting, respectively, visual and spatial working memory processes. Young and older participants had to remember the locations of five equal objects under three different conditions: a baseline (immediate recall), a maintenance (including a delay of 5 seconds), and a manipulation (e.g., relocate all objects one column to the right) condition. Only older adults performed worse on the sequential compared to the simultaneous baseline condition and only this group revealed lower performance on the sequential delay compared to the simultaneous delay condition. However, in both groups the manipulation condition affected performance on the simultaneous and sequential presentation modes to the same extent. The findings of this study therefore partially support an age-related differentiation between visual and spatial working memory, with a stronger age effect on spatial than on visual working memory. 14 p.

Details

ISSN :
15413535 and 00914150
Volume :
73
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The International Journal of Aging and Human Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c16fd6de1db26133f1583f182ea329e