Aging and strategic prospective memory monitoring

被引:0
|
作者
B. Hunter Ball
Y. Peeta Li
Julie M. Bugg
机构
[1] University of Texas at Arlington,Department of Psychology
[2] Washington University in St. Louis,Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences
来源
Memory & Cognition | 2020年 / 48卷
关键词
Aging; Prospective memory; Attention; Strategic monitoring; Context;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Monitoring the environment for the occurrence of prospective memory (PM) targets is a resource-demanding process that produces cost (e.g., slowing) to ongoing activities. Prior research has shown that older adults are able to monitor strategically, which involves the activation of monitoring when contextually appropriate and deactivation of monitoring when it is not thereby affording conservation of limited-capacity attentional resources. However, the time course and efficiency with which these processes operate with increased age are unknown. In the current study, participants performed an ongoing lexical decision task in which words/nonwords were blocked by font color in sets of ten trials (ten red trials followed by ten blue trials). Importantly, participants were informed that PM targets (“TOR” syllable) would only occur in red trials. Replicating previous work, both younger and older adults were successfully able to disengage monitoring upon encountering the unexpected (i.e., blue) context. However, while younger adults completely disengaged monitoring in the unexpected context, older adults continued to show monitoring across the majority of trials. Additionally, younger, but not older, adults showed a re-engagement of monitoring at the end of the unexpected context in preparation for the upcoming expected context. These findings suggest that while strategic monitoring generally remains intact with increased age, the disengagement and preparatory re-engagement of strategic monitoring may operate less optimally for older adults.
引用
收藏
页码:370 / 389
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Aging and strategic prospective memory monitoring
    Ball, B. Hunter
    Li, Y. Peeta
    Bugg, Julie M.
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 2020, 48 (03) : 370 - 389
  • [2] Aging and the Strategic Use of Context to Control Prospective Memory Monitoring
    Ball, B. Hunter
    Bugg, Julie M.
    PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING, 2018, 33 (03) : 527 - 544
  • [3] The influence of strategic monitoring on the neural correlates of prospective memory
    Robert West
    Memory & Cognition, 2007, 35 : 1034 - 1046
  • [5] Aging and prospective memory: the role of working memory and monitoring processes
    Bisiacchi, Patrizia S.
    Tarantino, Vincenza
    Ciccola, Alessia
    AGING CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2008, 20 (06) : 569 - 577
  • [6] Aging and prospective memory: The role of working memory and monitoring processes
    Bisiacchi P.S.
    Tarantino V.
    Ciccola A.
    Aging Clinical and Experimental Research, 2008, 20 (6) : 569 - 577
  • [7] Modeling the Effects of Aging on Prospective-Memory Monitoring
    Horn, S.
    Bayen, U. J.
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2013, 27 : 27 - 28
  • [8] Strategic monitoring improves prospective memory: A meta-analysis
    Peper, Phil
    Ball, B. Hunter
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 76 (11): : 2546 - 2569
  • [9] Context cue focality influences strategic prospective memory monitoring
    B. Hunter Ball
    Julie M. Bugg
    Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 2018, 25 : 1405 - 1415
  • [10] Retrieval experience in prospective memory: Strategic monitoring and spontaneous retrieval
    Meier, Beat
    Zimmermann, Thomas D.
    Perrig, Walter J.
    MEMORY, 2006, 14 (07) : 872 - 889