Aging and Recognition Memory: A Meta-Analysis
Recognizing a stimulus as previously encountered is a crucial everyday life skill and a critical task motivating theoretical development in models of human memory. Although there are clear age-related memory deficits in tasks requiring recall or memory for context, the existence and nature of age di...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Psychological bulletin 2019-04, Vol.145 (4), p.339-371 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Recognizing a stimulus as previously encountered is a crucial everyday life skill and a critical task motivating theoretical development in models of human memory. Although there are clear age-related memory deficits in tasks requiring recall or memory for context, the existence and nature of age differences in recognition memory remain unclear. The nature of any such deficits is critical to understanding the effects of age on memory because recognition tasks allow fewer strategic backdoors to supporting memory than do tasks of recall. Consequently, recognition may provide the purest measure of age-related memory deficit of all standard memory tasks. We conducted a meta-analysis of 232 prior experiments on age differences in recognition memory. As an organizing framework, we used signal-detection theory (Green & Swets, 1966; Macmillan & Creelman, 2005) to characterize recognition memory in terms of both discrimination between studied items and unstudied lures (d′) and response bias or criterion (c). Relative to young adults, older adults showed reduced discrimination accuracy and a more liberal response criterion (i.e., greater tendency to term items new). Both of these effects were influenced by multiple, differing variables, with larger age deficits when studied material must be discriminated from familiar or related material, but smaller when studying semantically rich materials. These results support a view in which neither the self-initiation of mnemonic processes nor the deployment of strategic processes is the only source of age-related memory deficits, and they add to our understanding of the mechanisms underlying those changes.
Public Significance Statement
This meta-analysis indicates that older adults are less effective than young adults at recognizing previously presented stimuli, such as words, faces, or pictures. Older adults also have a stronger tendency to err on the side of judging things as old (previously studied or encountered). Differences in age deficits across tasks supports theories that older adults rely more on meaning in memory and have less accurate memory for the source of information. |
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ISSN: | 0033-2909 1939-1455 |
DOI: | 10.1037/bul0000185 |