Authors
Thomas T Hills, Rui Mata, Andreas Wilke, Gregory R Samanez-Larkin
Publication date
2013
Journal
Developmental Psychology
Volume
49
Issue
12
Pages
2396-2404
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Three alternative mechanisms for age-related decline in memory search have been proposed, which result from either reduced processing speed (global slowing hypothesis), overpersistence on categories (cluster-switching hypothesis), or the inability to maintain focus on local cues related to a decline in working memory (cue-maintenance hypothesis). We investigated these 3 hypotheses by formally modeling the semantic recall patterns of 185 adults between 27 to 99 years of age in the animal fluency task (Thurstone, 1938). The results indicate that people switch between global frequency-based retrieval cues and local item-based retrieval cues to navigate their semantic memory. Contrary to the global slowing hypothesis that predicts no qualitative differences in dynamic search processes and the cluster-switching hypothesis that predicts reduced switching between retrieval cues, the results indicate that as …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
TT Hills, R Mata, A Wilke, GR Samanez-Larkin - Developmental psychology, 2013