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We studied oscillatory mechanisms of memory formation in 48 younger and 51 older adults in an intentional associative memory task with cued recall. While older adults showed lower memory performance than young adults, we found subsequent memory effects (SME) in alpha/beta and theta frequency bands in both age groups. Using logistic mixed effects models, we investigated whether interindividual differences in structural integrity of key memory regions could account for interindividual differences in the strength of the SME. Structural integrity of inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and hippocampus was reduced in older adults. SME in the alpha/beta band were modulated by the cortical thickness of IFG, in line with its hypothesized role for deep semantic elaboration. Importantly, this structure–function relationship did not differ by age group. However, older adults were more frequently represented among the participants with low cortical thickness and consequently weaker SME in the alpha band. Thus, our results suggest that differences in the structural integrity of the IFG contribute not only to interindividual, but also to age differences in memory formation.
Neural pattern similarity differentially relates to memory performance in younger and older adults
(2019)
Age-related memory decline is associated with changes in neural functioning, but little is known about how aging affects the quality of information representation in the brain. Whereas a long-standing hypothesis of the aging literature links cognitive impairments to less distinct neural representations in old age (“neural dedifferentiation”), memory studies have shown that overlapping neural representations of different studied items are beneficial for memory performance. In an electroencephalography (EEG) study, we addressed the question whether distinctiveness or similarity between patterns of neural activity supports memory differentially in younger and older adults. We analyzed between-item neural pattern similarity in 50 younger (19–27 years old) and 63 older (63–75 years old) male and female human adults who repeatedly studied and recalled scene–word associations using a mnemonic imagery strategy. We compared the similarity of spatiotemporal EEG frequency patterns during initial encoding in relation to subsequent recall performance. The within-person association between memory success and pattern similarity differed between age groups: For older adults, better memory performance was linked to higher similarity early in the encoding trials, whereas young adults benefited from lower similarity between earlier and later periods during encoding, which might reflect their better success in forming unique memorable mental images of the joint picture–word pairs. Our results advance the understanding of the representational properties that give rise to subsequent memory, as well as how these properties may change in the course of aging.
Although much is known about the critical importance of active verbal rehearsal for successful recall, knowledge about the mechanisms of rehearsal and their respective development in children is very limited. To be able to rehearse several items together, these items have to be available, or, if presented and rehearsed previously, retrieved from memory. Therefore, joint rehearsal of several items may itself be considered recall. Accordingly, by analyzing free recall, one cannot only gain insight into how recall and rehearsal unfold, but also into how principles that govern children’s recall govern children’s rehearsal. Over a period of three and a half years (beginning at grade 3) 54 children were longitudinally assessed seven times on several overt rehearsal free recall trials. A first set of analyses on recall revealed significant age-related increases in the primacy effect and an age-invariant recency effect. In the middle portion of the list, wave-shaped recall characteristics emerged and increased with age, indicating grouping of the list into subsequences. In a second set of analyses, overt rehearsal behavior was decomposed into distinct rehearsal sets. Analyses of these sets revealed that the distribution of rehearsals within each set resembled the serial position curves with one- or two-item primacy and recency effects and wave-shaped rehearsal patterns in between. In addition, rehearsal behavior throughout the list was characterized by a decreasing tendency to begin rehearsal sets with the first list item. This result parallels the phenomenon of beginning recall with the first item on short lists and with the last item on longer lists.
Reaction times to previously ignored information are often delayed, a phenomenon referred to as negative priming (NP). Rothermund et al. (2005) proposed that NP is caused by the retrieval of incidental stimulus-response associations when consecutive displays share visual features but require different responses. In two experiments we examined whether the features (color, shape) that reappear in consecutive displays, or their level of processing (early-perceptual, late-semantic) moderate the likelihood that stimulus-response associations are retrieved. Using a perceptual matching task (Experiment 1), NP occurred independently of whether responses were repeated or switched. Only when implementing a semantic-matching task (Experiment 2), negative priming was determined by response-repetition as predicted by response-retrieval theory. The results can be explained in terms of a task-dependent temporal discrimination process (Milliken et al., 1998): Response-relevant features are encoded more strongly and/or are more likely to be retrieved than irrelevant features.
Das Ziel der Studie bestand einerseits in der Untersuchung der Zusammenhänge zwischen der sich im Vorschulalter entwickelnden Theory of Mind und dem sich ebenfalls zu diesem Zeitpunkt ausbildenden episodischen Gedächtnis unter der Berücksichtigung verschiedener potentieller Einflussfaktoren, wie beispielsweise den sprachlichen und exekutiven Fähigkeiten der Kinder. Auf der anderen Seite sollten zudem die Veränderungen innerhalb der einzelnen Konstrukte im zeitlichen Verlauf zwischen dem vierten und fünften Lebensjahr abgebildet werden. Dazu wurden 40 Kindern an zwei im Abstand von einem Jahr stattfindenden Erhebungszeitpunkten verschiedenste Aufgaben zur Erfassung ihrer jeweiligen Fähigkeiten in den unterschiedlichen kognitiven Bereichen vorgelegt. Das Durchschnittsalter der Kinder zum Zeitpunkt der ersten Messung betrug M = 38.73 Monate (SD = 2.84) und beim zweiten Messzeitpunkt M = 51.03 Monate (SD = 2.89). Anhand der erhobenen Daten konnte gezeigt werden, dass neben dem Zeitverständnis vor allem die Fähigkeit der dreijährigen Kinder zur Perspektivübernahme einen signifikanten Beitrag zur Erklärung ihrer späteren Kompetenzen auf dem Gebiet des episodischen Gedächtnisses leistet. Weiterhin konnten mittels der zwei Messzeitpunkte sowohl die quantitativen als auch qualitativen Veränderungen innerhalb der unterschiedlichen Theory of Mind-Kompetenzen bzw. innerhalb des sich wandelnden Repräsentationsverständnisses abgebildet werden. Zudem konnte ebenfalls die bedeutende Rolle der Sprache als optimales Medium zum verbalen Austausch über die verschiedenen Perspektiven von sich und anderen sowie über vergangene, gegenwärtige oder zukünftige Erlebnisse konstatiert werden. Im Gegensatz zu den Befunden anderer Studien scheint hingegen den vorliegenden Befunden nach dem Einfluss der exekutiven Fähigkeiten auf die Theory of Mind-Kompetenzen der Kinder keine so grundlegende Bedeutung zuzukommen.