Authors
Darlene Floden, Donald T Stuss, Fergus IM Craik
Publication date
2000/12/2
Journal
Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition
Volume
7
Issue
4
Pages
245-259
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Description
The reports regarding whether normal aging is associated with faster forgetting in the Brown-Peterson task have been conflicting. We hypothesized that, in light of documented age differences on other tasks involving secondary memory, older adults would show disproportionate forgetting on the Brown-Peterson task as retention interval lengthens. Previous negative results might be a function of the specific experimental procedure used. Experiment 1, using a commonly employed procedure, did not indicate an age-related increase in rate of forgetting. This procedure allowed for differences in rehearsal opportunity, task difficulty, and amount of information to be processed. Experiment 2 controlled for these factors and did reveal significant age differences in the forgetting function. This age difference occurred only at the point where recall became dependent upon secondary memory. There was, however, no evidence …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
D Floden, DT Stuss, FIM Craik - Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition, 2000