Thursday, October 9, 2025
Innovatyve Wellness Solutions
  • Home
  • Health
    • Brain Research
  • Obesity and Weight
  • Mental Health
    • Alzheimers Disease
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Cognition
    • Depression
  • More
    • Mindfulness
    • Neuroscience
    • Relationships
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
HealthNews
No Result
View All Result
Home Cognition

Schemas help older adults compensate for age-related memory decline, study finds

Editorial Team by Editorial Team
August 20, 2024
in Cognition
0
Schemas help older adults compensate for age-related memory decline, study finds
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Follow PsyPost on Google News

According to a new study published in Cognition, schema knowledge compensates for age-related memory decline by filling in the gaps when recollection fails.

As we age, our episodic memory—that is, recalling specific events and experiences—tends to decline. However, this decline does not affect all types of information equally. Research has shown that when information aligns with pre-existing knowledge or schemas, older adults often perform as well as younger adults. There are two main theories explaining how schemas influence memory in older adults: the compensatory theory, which suggests that schemas help fill in gaps caused by memory failures, and the inhibitory deficit theory, which argues that schemas interfere with memory by causing confusion with incongruent information.

Evidence has been inconclusive due to the complexity of isolating memory and schema effects. In this work, Michelle M. Ramey and colleagues sought to directly examine these effects.

The study involved 70 participants, including 35 older adults aged 62-87 years and 35 younger adults aged 18-23 years. The online experiment consisted of two phases: a study phase and a test phase. During the study phase, participants searched for target objects in 60 unique scenes, each presented twice. The objects were either placed in schema-congruent locations (e.g., a coffee cup on a coffee table) or schema-incongruent locations (e.g., a coffee cup on the floor). In the test phase, participants were shown 80 scenes (60 old and 20 new) without the target objects and were asked to recall the target object’s location and rate their memory confidence on a 6-point scale.

The study revealed that older adults exhibited higher schema bias than younger adults, indicating that their memory decisions were more influenced by schema congruency. Specifically, older adults’ spatial recall accuracy was better for schema-congruent scenes compared to incongruent scenes, and this effect was larger than in younger adults. Importantly, the researchers discovered that this schema bias was primarily driven by recollection failures in older adults. When older adults had poor recollection, they relied more on schema knowledge to fill in the gaps, providing evidence for the compensatory theory.

Additionally, older adults’ spatial accuracy within recollected scenes was lower than that of younger adults, even when they correctly remembered the scenes. This suggests that older adults have poorer memory precision and rely more on schemas when their memory is less precise. However, within familiar scenes, older adults performed similarly to younger adults, indicating that familiarity-based memory was not impaired by aging.

A limitation outlined by the authors is that the study was conducted online due to COVID-19 precautions, which may have introduced variability in participants’ testing environments.

The study, “How schema knowledge influences memory in older adults: Filling in the gaps, or leading memory astray?”, was authored by Michelle M. Ramey, Andrew P. Yonelinas, and John M. Henderson.



Source link

Tags: AdultsAgeRelatedcompensatedeclineFindsMemoryOlderSchemasStudy
Advertisement Banner
Previous Post

Breakthrough AI Predicts Early Autism With Surprising Accuracy

Next Post

Go for the Life Partner, Not the Prom Date

Editorial Team

Editorial Team

Next Post
Go for the Life Partner, Not the Prom Date

Go for the Life Partner, Not the Prom Date

Discussion about this post

Recommended

Redefining Healthy Eating

Redefining Healthy Eating

3 years ago
12 Morning Workouts for Energy, Mobility, and Strength

12 Morning Workouts for Energy, Mobility, and Strength

2 years ago

Don't Miss

Chronic wasting disease detected in four more Illinois counties – wandtv.com

Trump’s CDC brings back “monkeypox” disease name despite racist connotation – Ars Technica

October 1, 2025
Strong Social Bonds May Literally Slow Aging at the Cellular Level

Strong Social Bonds May Literally Slow Aging at the Cellular Level

September 29, 2025
Evolent Health Sells Primary Care Business to Privia Health for $113M

Evolent Health Sells Primary Care Business to Privia Health for $113M

September 27, 2025
22 Best Epic Novels to Read in Your Lifetime (Classics & Modern Favorites)

22 Best Epic Novels to Read in Your Lifetime (Classics & Modern Favorites)

September 25, 2025

Recent News

Chronic wasting disease detected in four more Illinois counties – wandtv.com

State reports season's first flu death out of western North Carolina – WRAL.com

October 9, 2025
How a “Memory-Killing” Protein Could Help Defeat Cancer

How a “Memory-Killing” Protein Could Help Defeat Cancer

October 7, 2025

Categories

  • Alzheimers Disease
  • Brain Research
  • Cognition
  • Depression
  • Health
  • Mental Health
  • Mindfulness
  • Neuroscience
  • Relationships

Follow us

Recommended

  • State reports season's first flu death out of western North Carolina – WRAL.com
  • How a “Memory-Killing” Protein Could Help Defeat Cancer
  • Healthcare Leaders Prioritize AI and Payer Integration for Financial Resilience
  • The Best Short Books to Read in a Single Sitting (2025 Update)
  • Trump’s CDC brings back “monkeypox” disease name despite racist connotation – Ars Technica

© 2022 Psychology Aisle

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Health
    • Brain Research
  • Obesity and Weight
  • Mental Health
    • Alzheimers Disease
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Cognition
    • Depression
  • More
    • Mindfulness
    • Neuroscience
    • Relationships
  • Contact

© 2022 Psychology Aisle