Everyday memory failures across adulthood: Implications for the age prospective memory paradox

被引:11
|
作者
Niedzwienska, Agnieszka [1 ]
Solga, Jozefina [1 ]
Zagaja, Patrycja [1 ]
Zolnierz, Magdalena [1 ]
机构
[1] Jagiellonian Univ, Dept Psychol, Appl Memory Res Lab, Krakow, Poland
来源
PLOS ONE | 2020年 / 15卷 / 09期
关键词
LIFE; PERFORMANCE; TASKS; OLDER;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0239581
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Despite the prevalence of everyday memory failures, little is known about which specific types have the strongest impact on everyday life, and whether their impact changes across adulthood. An investigation of memory failures at different ages is particularly informative to disentangle the age paradox in prospective memory, which seems to suggest that remembering to perform intended actions in everyday life improves with age. Therefore, 58 young adults, 40 middle-aged adults, and 54 elderly adults recorded their memory failures as and when they occurred during a 7-day period, and described how serious and consequential they were. Failures were coded into several subcategories of retrospective memory, prospective memory, and absent-minded lapses. It was prospective memory lapses that were overall the most common, serious and consequential ones. Young adults had substantially more prospective memory failures than the elderly and middle-aged adults who did not differ from each other. A young adult disadvantage still held up when lifestyle differences between young adults and the elderly were taken into account. Our findings support the age-related benefit previously found in naturalistic prospective memory tasks, and suggest that it is robust across various types of prospective memory tasks. The results also suggest that the benefit may result from both young adults having poor everyday prospective memory, compared to any adults of a greater age, and everyday prospective memory being spared from age-related decline between the middle and late adulthood.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Revisiting the Age-Prospective Memory Paradox Using Laboratory and Ecological Tasks
    Koo, Yu Wen
    Neumann, David L.
    Ownsworth, Tamara
    Shum, David H. K.
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 12
  • [32] Memory Complaints and Prospective Memory Performance across the Lifespan
    Zoellig, Jacqueline
    Sutter, Christine
    Mattli, Florentina
    Eschen, Anne
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR NEUROPSYCHOLOGIE, 2011, 22 (01) : 33 - 45
  • [33] Everyday Memory for Everyday Tasks: Prospective Memory as an Outcome Measure Following TBI in Older Adults
    Kinsella, Glynda J.
    BRAIN IMPAIRMENT, 2010, 11 (01) : 37 - 41
  • [34] Variation in cognitive failures: An individual differences investigation of everyday attention and memory failures
    Unsworth, Nash
    Brewer, Gene A.
    Spillers, Gregory J.
    JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 2012, 67 (01) : 1 - 16
  • [35] Prospective Memory and Everyday Memory Lapses in Individuals with Mild Cognitive Impairment
    Tam, J.
    McAlister, C.
    Schmitter-Edgecombe, M.
    ARCHIVES OF CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 26 (06) : 510 - 510
  • [36] Age benefits in everyday prospective memory: The influence of personal task importance, use of reminders and everyday stress
    Ihle, Andreas
    Schnitzspahn, Katharina
    Rendell, Peter G.
    Luong, Caecilia
    Kliegel, Matthias
    AGING NEUROPSYCHOLOGY AND COGNITION, 2012, 19 (1-2) : 84 - 101
  • [37] Prospective Memory in Parkinson Disease Across Laboratory and Self-Reported Everyday Performance
    Foster, Erin R.
    McDaniel, Mark A.
    Repovs, Grega
    Hershey, Tamara
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 23 (03) : 347 - 358
  • [38] BINGE DRINKING AND EVERYDAY PROSPECTIVE MEMORY DEFICITS
    Heffernan, T.
    EUROPEAN PSYCHIATRY, 2013, 28
  • [39] STRUCTURE OF EVERYDAY MEMORY IN ADULTS WITH AGE-ASSOCIATED MEMORY IMPAIRMENT
    TOMER, A
    LARRABEE, GJ
    CROOK, TH
    PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING, 1994, 9 (04) : 606 - 615
  • [40] Everyday memory failures reported by older and younger adults.
    Karl, T
    Schmitter-Edgecombe, M
    Simpson, A
    ARCHIVES OF CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1998, 13 (01) : 46 - 47