Age differences in item manipulation span: the case of letter-number sequencing.

Lisa Emery, Joel Myerson, Sandra Hale
Author Information
  1. Lisa Emery: Department of Psychology, Washington University, St Louis, MO, USA. ljemery@ncsu.edu

Abstract

The authors report 2 experiments in which they examined age differences in working memory tasks involving complex item manipulation (i.e., letter-number sequencing). In Experiment 1, age differences on tasks involving item manipulation were not greater than age differences on tasks requiring recall of items in the order in which they appeared, suggesting that older adults do not have difficulty with item manipulation per se. In Experiment 2, slower presentation rates increased age differences in item manipulation spans, although age differences at the fastest rate may be attributed to differences in strategy use. In both experiments, age differences were largest when participants were most likely to be remembering familiar sequences, suggesting that older adults may have difficulties dampening the representations of such sequences once they are activated.

MeSH Term

Adult
Age Factors
Aged
Female
Health Status
Humans
Male
Memory
Practice, Psychological
Reaction Time

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0differencesageitemmanipulationtasks2experimentsinvolvingletter-numbersequencingExperimentsuggestingolderadultsmaysequencesauthorsreportexaminedworkingmemorycomplexie1greaterrequiringrecallitemsorderappeareddifficultyperseslowerpresentationratesincreasedspansalthoughfastestrateattributedstrategyuselargestparticipantslikelyrememberingfamiliardifficultiesdampeningrepresentationsactivatedAgespan:case

Similar Articles

Cited By