Effects of age on a real-world What-Where-When memory task.

Many cognitive abilities decline with aging, making it difficult to detect pathological changes against a background of natural changes in cognition. Most of the tests to assess cognitive decline are artificial tasks that have little resemblance to the problems faced by people in everyday life. This...

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Main Authors: Adele eMazurek, Rajameenakshi eBhoopathy, Jenny C.A. Read, Peter eGallagher, Tom V Smulders
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnagi.2015.00074/full
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spelling doaj-3b1c4e1e7e774c389fa04da8445dd8a92020-11-25T01:01:35ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience1663-43652015-05-01710.3389/fnagi.2015.00074123030Effects of age on a real-world What-Where-When memory task.Adele eMazurek0Rajameenakshi eBhoopathy1Jenny C.A. Read2Peter eGallagher3Tom V Smulders4Newcastle University ­Newcastle University ­Newcastle University ­Newcastle University ­Newcastle University ­Many cognitive abilities decline with aging, making it difficult to detect pathological changes against a background of natural changes in cognition. Most of the tests to assess cognitive decline are artificial tasks that have little resemblance to the problems faced by people in everyday life. This means both that people may have little practice doing such tasks (potentially contributing to the decline in performance) and that the tasks may not be good predictors of real-world cognitive problems.In this study, we test the performance of young people (18-25 years) and older people (60+-year-olds) on a novel, more ecologically valid test of episodic memory: the real-world What-Where-When (WWW) memory test. We also compare them on a battery of other cognitive tests, including working memory, psychomotor speed, executive function, and episodic memory. Older people show the expected age-related declines on the test battery. In the WWW memory task, older people were more likely to fail to remember any What-Where-When combination than younger people were, although they did not significantly differ in their overall WWW score due to some older people performing as well as or better than most younger people. WWW memory performance was significantly predicted by other measures of episodic memory, such as the single-trial learning and long-term retention in the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning task and Combined Object Location Memory in the Object Relocation task. Self-reported memory complaints also predicted performance on the WWW task.These findings confirm that our real-world WWW memory task is a valid measure of episodic memory, with high ecological validity, which may be useful as a predictor of everyday memory abilities. The task will require a bit more development to improve its sensitivity to cognitive declines in aging and to potentially distinguish between mentally healthy older adults and those with early signs of cognitive pathologies.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnagi.2015.00074/fullAgingDementiaNeuropsychologyepisodic memoryEcological Validitywhat-where-when memory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adele eMazurek
Rajameenakshi eBhoopathy
Jenny C.A. Read
Peter eGallagher
Tom V Smulders
spellingShingle Adele eMazurek
Rajameenakshi eBhoopathy
Jenny C.A. Read
Peter eGallagher
Tom V Smulders
Effects of age on a real-world What-Where-When memory task.
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
Aging
Dementia
Neuropsychology
episodic memory
Ecological Validity
what-where-when memory
author_facet Adele eMazurek
Rajameenakshi eBhoopathy
Jenny C.A. Read
Peter eGallagher
Tom V Smulders
author_sort Adele eMazurek
title Effects of age on a real-world What-Where-When memory task.
title_short Effects of age on a real-world What-Where-When memory task.
title_full Effects of age on a real-world What-Where-When memory task.
title_fullStr Effects of age on a real-world What-Where-When memory task.
title_full_unstemmed Effects of age on a real-world What-Where-When memory task.
title_sort effects of age on a real-world what-where-when memory task.
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
issn 1663-4365
publishDate 2015-05-01
description Many cognitive abilities decline with aging, making it difficult to detect pathological changes against a background of natural changes in cognition. Most of the tests to assess cognitive decline are artificial tasks that have little resemblance to the problems faced by people in everyday life. This means both that people may have little practice doing such tasks (potentially contributing to the decline in performance) and that the tasks may not be good predictors of real-world cognitive problems.In this study, we test the performance of young people (18-25 years) and older people (60+-year-olds) on a novel, more ecologically valid test of episodic memory: the real-world What-Where-When (WWW) memory test. We also compare them on a battery of other cognitive tests, including working memory, psychomotor speed, executive function, and episodic memory. Older people show the expected age-related declines on the test battery. In the WWW memory task, older people were more likely to fail to remember any What-Where-When combination than younger people were, although they did not significantly differ in their overall WWW score due to some older people performing as well as or better than most younger people. WWW memory performance was significantly predicted by other measures of episodic memory, such as the single-trial learning and long-term retention in the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning task and Combined Object Location Memory in the Object Relocation task. Self-reported memory complaints also predicted performance on the WWW task.These findings confirm that our real-world WWW memory task is a valid measure of episodic memory, with high ecological validity, which may be useful as a predictor of everyday memory abilities. The task will require a bit more development to improve its sensitivity to cognitive declines in aging and to potentially distinguish between mentally healthy older adults and those with early signs of cognitive pathologies.
topic Aging
Dementia
Neuropsychology
episodic memory
Ecological Validity
what-where-when memory
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnagi.2015.00074/full
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