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Age differences in context use during reading and downstream effects on recognition memory.

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Older adults struggle with memory for sentence details compared to younger adults. Attentive reading can help aging individuals reduce memory errors and improve recall accuracy.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience of Aging
  • Human Memory

Background:

  • Sentential context significantly influences immediate sentence processing.
  • The long-term impact of context on memory representations remains less understood.
  • Age-related differences in context-dependent memory encoding are largely unexplored.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if sentential context affects long-term memory representations.
  • To examine age-related differences in how context influences memory.
  • To assess the impact of sentence predictability on memory for text.

Main Methods:

  • German-speaking participants of varying ages performed self-paced reading of predictable and unpredictable sentences.
  • Recognition memory was tested using previously seen words and lure words.
  • Reading times and memory performance (false remembering, old-new discrimination) were analyzed.

Main Results:

  • All age groups slowed reading for unpredictable sentences.
  • Aging individuals retained less specific sentence information than younger adults.
  • Aging adults exhibited higher false remembering rates and poorer old-new discrimination, which was mitigated by longer reading times for unpredictable sentences.

Conclusions:

  • Aging increases reliance on gist-based or schema-congruent memory processing.
  • Attentive encoding of textual information can mitigate age-related memory distortions.
  • Contextual predictability plays a crucial role in memory encoding and retrieval, with age-dependent effects.