2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2018.07.031
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Recognition memory shielded from semantic but not perceptual interference in normal aging

Abstract: Normal aging impairs long-term declarative memory, and evidence suggests that this impairment may be driven partly by structural or functional changes in the medial temporal lobe (MTL). Theories of MTL memory function therefore make predictions for age-related memory loss. One theory - the Representational-Hierarchical account - makes two specific predictions. First, recognition memory performance in older participants should be impaired by feature-level interference, in which studied items contain many shared… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Thus, they found that in this task age-related memory errors were driven more by perceptual than semantic relatedness. The results converge with those of another study that used intermixed visual word lists without distinctive fonts: Wilson, Potter, & Cowell (2018) also found no significant agerelated increase in false recognition of critical DRM lures, although memory was measured solely in terms of discrimination between studied items and lures (as in Fraundorf, Hourihan, Peters, & Benjamin, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 87%
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“…Thus, they found that in this task age-related memory errors were driven more by perceptual than semantic relatedness. The results converge with those of another study that used intermixed visual word lists without distinctive fonts: Wilson, Potter, & Cowell (2018) also found no significant agerelated increase in false recognition of critical DRM lures, although memory was measured solely in terms of discrimination between studied items and lures (as in Fraundorf, Hourihan, Peters, & Benjamin, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…We made two sets of alternative predictions. If Tun et al (1998) were correct that older people are more prone to gist memory than young adults when word lists are blocked, an age effect on false recognition would now be observed, unlike in both Burnside et al's (2017) experiments and (D. M. Wilson et al, 2018). Alternatively, if associative false recognition is age-invariant when there is no prior recall test, we would find Bayesian evidence in favour of the null hypothesis, like Burnside et al (2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 71%
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