Levels of specificity in episodic memory: Insights from response accuracy and subjective confidence ratings in older adults and in younger adults under full or divided attention

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Levels of specificity in episodic memory: Insights from response accuracy and subjective confidence ratings in older adults and in younger adults under full or divided attention
المؤلفون: Moshe Naveh-Benjamin, Nathaniel R. Greene, Sydney Chism
المصدر: Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. 151:804-819
بيانات النشر: American Psychological Association (APA), 2022.
سنة النشر: 2022
مصطلحات موضوعية: Aging, Memory Disorders, Forgetting, Memory, Episodic, Association Learning, Metacognition, Recognition, Psychology, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, PsycINFO, Content-addressable memory, Young Adult, Developmental Neuroscience, Encoding (memory), Mental Recall, Humans, Attention, Young adult, Psychology, Episodic memory, General Psychology, Associative property, Aged, Cognitive psychology
الوصف: We propose that the specificity with which associations in episodic memory can be remembered varies on a continuum. Older adults have been shown to forget highly specific information (Greene & Naveh-Benjamin, 2020b), and in Experiment 1, we provide further evidence that older adults' deficits in associative memory scale with the amount of specificity that needs to be retrieved. In Experiment 2, we address whether depleted attentional resources, simulated in young adults under divided attention at encoding, could account for older adults' associative memory specificity deficits. Participants studied face-scene pairs and later completed an associative recognition test, with test pairs that were old, highly similar or less similar to old pairs, or completely dissimilar. Participants rated their confidence in their decisions. False positive recognition responses increased with the amount of specificity needed to be retrieved. Whereas older adults' associative memory deficits scaled with how much specific information needed to be remembered, younger adults under divided attention had a more general deficit in associative memory. Confidence-accuracy analysis showed that participants were best able to calibrate their confidence when less specific information was needed to perform well. While divided attention young adults were generally prone to high-confidence errors, older adults' high-confidence errors were most apparent when highly specific information needed to be remembered. These results provide further evidence for levels of specificity in episodic memory. Access to the most specific levels is most vulnerable to forgetting, in line with a specificity principle of memory (Surprenant & Neath, 2009). Further, depleted attentional resources at encoding cannot entirely explain older adults' associative memory specificity deficits. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
تدمد: 1939-2222
0096-3445
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::516c0132636a96016e84c417a9503939
https://doi.org/10.1037/xge0001113
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....516c0132636a96016e84c417a9503939
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE