Ageing, remembering, and executive function
Category
Journal Article
Authors
Clarys, D., Bugaiska, A., Tapia, G., Baudouin, A.
Year
2009
Title
Ageing, remembering, and executive function
Journal / book / conference
Memory
Abstract
This study was designed to investigate the relationship between executive functions and the age-related decline in episodic memory through the states-of-awareness approach. Following the presentation of a word list, a group of younger adults and a group of older adults undertook a recognition test in which they classified their responses according to the Remember-Know-Guess procedure (Gardiner Richardson-Klavehn, 2000). In order to operationalise the executive function hypothesis, we investigated three specific executive functions (updating, shifting, and inhibition of a prepotent response) described in Miyake et al.'s (2000) theoretical model, and a complex executive task. The results revealed that fewer R responses were made during the recognition test by the older than the younger group, whereas there was no difference between the groups in the number of K responses. In addition, correlations indicated that remembering depended on executive function measures, whereas knowing did not. The hierarchical regression analyses showed that controlling for executive function, and particularly for the 2-back test, largely removed the age-related variance in remembering. These findings support the notion that executive dysfunction, and specifically updating decline, plays a central role in age-related memory loss.
Issue
2
Volume
17
Pages
158-168