Semantic knowledge attenuates age-related differences in event segmentation and episodic memory

被引:0
|
作者
Barbara L. Pitts
Maverick E. Smith
Kimberly M. Newberry
Heather R. Bailey
机构
[1] Kansas State University,College of Arts and Sciences, Psychological Sciences
[2] Shenandoah University,undefined
来源
Memory & Cognition | 2022年 / 50卷
关键词
Semantic knowledge; Episodic memory; Event segmentation; Cognitive aging;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
While semantic and episodic memory may be distinct memory systems, their interdependence is substantial. For instance, decades of work have shown that semantic knowledge facilitates episodic memory. Here, we aim to clarify this interactive relationship by determining whether semantic knowledge facilitates the acquisition of new episodic memories, in part, by influencing an encoding mechanism, event segmentation. In the current study, we evaluated the extent to which semantic knowledge shapes how people segment ongoing activity and how such knowledge-related benefits in segmentation affect episodic memory performance. To investigate these effects, we combined data across three studies that had young and older adults segment and remember videos of everyday activities that were either familiar or unfamiliar to their age group. We found age-related differences in event-segmentation ability and memory performance, but only when older adults lacked semantic knowledge. Most importantly, when they had access to relevant semantic knowledge, older adults segmented and remembered information similar to young adults. Our findings indicate that older adults can use semantic knowledge to effectively encode and retrieve everyday information. These effects suggest that future interventions can leverage older adults’ intact semantic knowledge to attenuate age-related deficits in event segmentation and episodic long-term memory.
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页码:586 / 600
页数:14
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