Older people are more prone to memory distortions and errors than young people, but do not always show greater false recognition in the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) task. We report two preregistered experiments investigating whether recent findings of age-invariant false recognition extend to designs in which studied items are blocked. According to Tun, Wingfield, Rosen, & Blanchard (1998), age effects on false recognition in the DRM task are due to a greater reliance on gist processing which is enhanced under blocked study conditions. Experiment 1 assessed false recognition in an online variant of the DRM task where words were presented visually, with incidental encoding. The results showed Bayesian evidence against greater false recogni...
In two experiments we investigated whether older adult controls (OACs) and people with mild and mode...
Our study examined processing effects in improving memory accuracy in older and younger adults. Spec...
Older adults are more likely to falsely recognize novel events than young adults, and recent behavio...
Two experiments explored whether the higher vulnerability to false memories in the DRM (J. Deese, 19...
In this paper, we used the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) false memory paradigm to test two contendi...
This study examines the effect of age on false recognition error. Various lure conditions (critical...
Recent work has demonstrated an age-related increase in susceptibility to illusory memories; specifi...
The influence of available processing resources on the resistance to false memories (FMs) for lists ...
Older adults consistently show elevated rates of false recognition of new items that are related to ...
The purpose of the current research was to examine age-related differences in false recognition and ...
© 2018 The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Soci...
Older adults (OAs) are more likely to falsely recognize novel events than young adults, and recent b...
Older adults (OAs) are more likely to falsely recognize novel events than young adults, and recent b...
This study investigated semantic and perceptual influences on false recognition in older and young a...
International audienceEmploying a false alarm recognition procedure with learning of highly associat...
In two experiments we investigated whether older adult controls (OACs) and people with mild and mode...
Our study examined processing effects in improving memory accuracy in older and younger adults. Spec...
Older adults are more likely to falsely recognize novel events than young adults, and recent behavio...
Two experiments explored whether the higher vulnerability to false memories in the DRM (J. Deese, 19...
In this paper, we used the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) false memory paradigm to test two contendi...
This study examines the effect of age on false recognition error. Various lure conditions (critical...
Recent work has demonstrated an age-related increase in susceptibility to illusory memories; specifi...
The influence of available processing resources on the resistance to false memories (FMs) for lists ...
Older adults consistently show elevated rates of false recognition of new items that are related to ...
The purpose of the current research was to examine age-related differences in false recognition and ...
© 2018 The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Soci...
Older adults (OAs) are more likely to falsely recognize novel events than young adults, and recent b...
Older adults (OAs) are more likely to falsely recognize novel events than young adults, and recent b...
This study investigated semantic and perceptual influences on false recognition in older and young a...
International audienceEmploying a false alarm recognition procedure with learning of highly associat...
In two experiments we investigated whether older adult controls (OACs) and people with mild and mode...
Our study examined processing effects in improving memory accuracy in older and younger adults. Spec...
Older adults are more likely to falsely recognize novel events than young adults, and recent behavio...