Cognitive scientists and philosophers recently have highlighted the value of thinking about people at risk of or living with dementia as intertwined parts of broader cognitive systems that involve their spouse, family, friends, or carers. By this view, we rely on people and things around us to “scaffold” mental processes such as memory. In the current study, we identified 39 long-married, older adult couples who are part of the Australian Imaging Biomarkers and Lifestyle (AIBL) Study of Ageing; all were cognitively healthy but half were subjective memory complainers. During two visits to their homes 1 week apart, we assessed husbands’ and wives’ cognitive performance across a range of everyday memory tasks working alone (Week 1) versus toge...
This article explores how partners keep the conversation going with people living with dementia (PLW...
Rapidly growing research reveals complex yet systematic consequences of collaboration on memory in y...
The adverse effects of aging on declarative memory are reliably observed when younger and older adul...
People live and age together in social groups. Across a range of outcomes, research has identified i...
Although we know a great deal about the effects of age on memory, we know less about how couples rem...
Recent research suggests that remembering with a long-term partner may scaffold successful memory. T...
A substantial number of older adults have acquired a hearing loss. Natural aging processes often res...
Prospective memory is a key ability required for independent living and consistent with Einstein and...
Although we know a great deal about the effects of age on memory, we know less about how couples rem...
Two complementary approaches to the study of collaborative remembering have produced contrasting res...
Cognitive and psychosocial associations of hearing loss continue to surface in hearing science and p...
Development does not take place in isolation; close others form an important dyad for exploring inte...
While we often engage in conversational reminiscing with loved ones, the effects of these conversati...
A burgeoning literature links being married to better cognitive health, but less attention has been ...
To understand the impact of memory loss on aging in place, this paper investigated dyads where one s...
This article explores how partners keep the conversation going with people living with dementia (PLW...
Rapidly growing research reveals complex yet systematic consequences of collaboration on memory in y...
The adverse effects of aging on declarative memory are reliably observed when younger and older adul...
People live and age together in social groups. Across a range of outcomes, research has identified i...
Although we know a great deal about the effects of age on memory, we know less about how couples rem...
Recent research suggests that remembering with a long-term partner may scaffold successful memory. T...
A substantial number of older adults have acquired a hearing loss. Natural aging processes often res...
Prospective memory is a key ability required for independent living and consistent with Einstein and...
Although we know a great deal about the effects of age on memory, we know less about how couples rem...
Two complementary approaches to the study of collaborative remembering have produced contrasting res...
Cognitive and psychosocial associations of hearing loss continue to surface in hearing science and p...
Development does not take place in isolation; close others form an important dyad for exploring inte...
While we often engage in conversational reminiscing with loved ones, the effects of these conversati...
A burgeoning literature links being married to better cognitive health, but less attention has been ...
To understand the impact of memory loss on aging in place, this paper investigated dyads where one s...
This article explores how partners keep the conversation going with people living with dementia (PLW...
Rapidly growing research reveals complex yet systematic consequences of collaboration on memory in y...
The adverse effects of aging on declarative memory are reliably observed when younger and older adul...