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Stronger evidence for own-age effects in memory for older as compared to younger adults
- 1.0366213 - PSÚ 2012 RIV GB eng J - Journal Article
Freund, A.M. - Kouřilová, Sylvie - Kuhl, P.
Stronger evidence for own-age effects in memory for older as compared to younger adults.
Memory. Roč. 19, č. 5 (2011), s. 429-448. ISSN 0965-8211. E-ISSN 1464-0686
Institutional research plan: CEZ:AV0Z70250504
Keywords : own-age effect * memory bias * age relevance * ageing
Subject RIV: AN - Psychology
Impact factor: 2.089, year: 2011
Three studies examined whether younger and older adults better recall information associated with their own than information related to another age group. All studies compared young and older adults with respect to incidental memory for previously presented stimuli (Studies 1 and 2: everyday objects; Study 3: vacation advertisements) that had been randomly paired with an age-related cue (e.g., photo of a young or an old person; the word “young” or “old”). All three studies found the expected interaction of participants’ age and age-associated information. Studies 1 and 2 showed that the memory bias for information arbitrarily associated with one's own as compared to another age group was significant for older adults only. However, when age-relevance was introduced in a context of equal importance to younger and older adults (information about vacations paired either with pictures of young or older adults), the memory bias for one's own age group was clearly present for both younger and older adults (Study 3).
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0201272
Number of the records: 1