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Implicit Learning of Affective Responses in Dementia Patients: A Face-Emotion-Association Paradigm
Authors:Nathan S Rose  Joel Myerson  Mitchell S Sommers  Sandra Hale
Institution:1. Washington University , St. Louis, MO, USA nrose@wustl.edu;3. Washington University , St. Louis, MO, USA
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Young and older adults performed verbal and spatial storage-only and storage-plus-processing working memory tasks while performing a secondary finger tapping task, and the effects on both the maximum capacity (measured as the longest series correct) and the reliability (measured as the proportion of items correct) of working memory were assessed. Tapping tended to produce greater disruption of working memory tasks that place greater demands on executive processes (i.e., storage-plus-processing tasks compared to storage-only span tasks). Moreover, tapping produced domain-general interference, disrupting both verbal and spatial working memory, providing further support for the idea that tapping interferes with the executive component of the working memory system, rather than domain-specific maintenance processes. Nevertheless, tapping generally produced equivalent interference effects in young and older adults. Taken together, these findings are inconsistent with the hypothesis that age-related declines in working memory are primarily attributable to a deficit in the executive component.
Keywords:Working memory  Short-term memory  Aging  Executive  Dual-task  Item-manipulation
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