The present study was adapted from the sentence completion task of Hartman and Hasher (1991). We addressed the question raised by Burke (1997): are the age-related differences in priming effects found in that task better explained by deficits in explicit memory or by inefficient inhibitory mechanisms? In the study phase, older and younger adults read high cloze sentences ending with an expected or an unexpected final word. In the second phase, participants were asked to complete sentence frames with either the final word presented during the study phase (inclusion condition) or with another, new word (exclusion condition). The third phase was an indirect memory test of perceptual identification. Finally, we compared explicit memory for reca...
Objective: Declines in working memory are a ubiquitous finding within the cognitive-aging literature...
ABSTRACT—Selectively retrieving a subset of previously studied material can cause forgetting of the ...
According to Hasher, Zacks, and May (Attention and performance XVII. Cognitive regulation of perform...
The hypothesis that older adults have more difficulty than younger adults suppressing irrelevant inf...
In the 1st part of the experiment, older and younger adults read a series of high-cloze sentence fra...
The use of previously distracting information on memory tests with indirect instructions is usually ...
The use of previously distracting information on memory tests with indirect instructions is usually ...
We present a test of whether age-related differences in the management of interference during memory...
We present a test of whether age-related differences in the management of interference during memory...
While an age-related deficit in inhibitory control is well-established in some areas of cognition, t...
grantor: University of TorontoFive experiments examined whether age differences in a memo...
Two experiments tested 1 aspect of L. Hasher and R. T. Zacks's (1988) reduced inhibition hypothesis,...
Age can affect memory performance. This statement is so often heard that it has become almost a trui...
grantor: University of TorontoFive experiments examined whether age differences in a memo...
This study examined the relationship between age and inhibitory functioning within a sample of older...
Objective: Declines in working memory are a ubiquitous finding within the cognitive-aging literature...
ABSTRACT—Selectively retrieving a subset of previously studied material can cause forgetting of the ...
According to Hasher, Zacks, and May (Attention and performance XVII. Cognitive regulation of perform...
The hypothesis that older adults have more difficulty than younger adults suppressing irrelevant inf...
In the 1st part of the experiment, older and younger adults read a series of high-cloze sentence fra...
The use of previously distracting information on memory tests with indirect instructions is usually ...
The use of previously distracting information on memory tests with indirect instructions is usually ...
We present a test of whether age-related differences in the management of interference during memory...
We present a test of whether age-related differences in the management of interference during memory...
While an age-related deficit in inhibitory control is well-established in some areas of cognition, t...
grantor: University of TorontoFive experiments examined whether age differences in a memo...
Two experiments tested 1 aspect of L. Hasher and R. T. Zacks's (1988) reduced inhibition hypothesis,...
Age can affect memory performance. This statement is so often heard that it has become almost a trui...
grantor: University of TorontoFive experiments examined whether age differences in a memo...
This study examined the relationship between age and inhibitory functioning within a sample of older...
Objective: Declines in working memory are a ubiquitous finding within the cognitive-aging literature...
ABSTRACT—Selectively retrieving a subset of previously studied material can cause forgetting of the ...
According to Hasher, Zacks, and May (Attention and performance XVII. Cognitive regulation of perform...