Breadcrumbs Section. Click here to navigate to respective pages.
Book

Book
Memory and Aging
DOI link for Memory and Aging
Memory and Aging book
Memory and Aging
DOI link for Memory and Aging
Memory and Aging book
Get Citation
ABSTRACT
Current demographical patterns predict an aging worldwide population. It is projected that by 2050, more than 20% of the US population and 40% of the Japanese population will be older than 65. A dramatic increase in research on memory and aging has emerged to understand the age-related changes in memory since the ability to learn new information and retrieve previously learned information is essential for successful aging, and allows older adults to adapt to changes in their environment, self-concept, and social roles.
This volume represents the latest psychological research on different aspects of age-related changes in memory. Written by a group of leading international researchers, its chapters cover a broad array of issues concerning the changes that occur in memory as people grow older, including the mechanisms and processes underlying these age-related memory changes, how these changes interact with social and cultural environments, and potential programs intended to increase memory performance in old age. Similarly, the chapters draw upon diverse methodological approaches, including cross-cultural extreme group experimental designs, longitudinal designs assessing intra-participant change, and computational approaches and neuroimaging assessment. Together, they provide converging evidence for stability and change in memory as people grow older, for the underlying causes of these patterns, as well as for the heterogeneity in older adults’ performance.
Memory and Aging is essential reading for researchers in memory, cognitive aging, and gerontology.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part 1 Psychological perspectives: Short-term and working memory
chapter 1|28 pages
Working memory still working: Age-related differences in working-memory functioning and cognitive control
chapter 2|18 pages
The interaction of linguistic constraints, working memory, and aging on language production and comprehension
chapter 3|20 pages
Error repetition phenomenon and its relation to cognitive control, working memory, and aging: Why does it happen outside the psychology laboratory?
part |2 pages
Part 2 Psychological perspectives: Long-term memory
chapter 4|26 pages
Age-related differences in explicit associative memory: Contributions of effortful-strategic and automatic processes
chapter 6|28 pages
Dissociable forms of implicit learning in aging
chapter 7|28 pages
Prospective memory and aging: Understanding the variability
part |2 pages
Part 3 Social, emotional, and cultural perspectives
chapter 8|32 pages
Memory in context: The impact of age-related goals on performance
chapter 10|26 pages
Metamemory and memory efciency in older adults: Learning about the benets of priority processing and value-directed remembering
part |2 pages
PART 4 Neuroscientic, biological, epidemiological, and health perspectives