The associative memory deficit of older adults: further support using face-name associations.

M Naveh-Benjamin, J Guez, A Kilb… - Psychology and …, 2004 - psycnet.apa.org
M Naveh-Benjamin, J Guez, A Kilb, S Reedy
Psychology and aging, 2004psycnet.apa.org
Previous studies have established an associative deficit hypothesis (Naveh-Benjamin,
2000), which attributes part of older adults' deficient episodic memory performance to their
difficulty in creating cohesive episodes. In this article, the authors further evaluate this
hypothesis, using ecologically relevant materials. Young and old participants studied name-
face pairs and were then tested on their recognition memory for the names, faces, and the
name-face pairs. The results extend the conditions under which older adults exhibit an …
Abstract
Previous studies have established an associative deficit hypothesis (Naveh-Benjamin, 2000), which attributes part of older adults' deficient episodic memory performance to their difficulty in creating cohesive episodes. In this article, the authors further evaluate this hypothesis, using ecologically relevant materials. Young and old participants studied name-face pairs and were then tested on their recognition memory for the names, faces, and the name-face pairs. The results extend the conditions under which older adults exhibit an associative deficit. They also show that reduced attentional resources are not the sole mediator of this deficit.
American Psychological Association
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