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The effects of age,enactment, and cue-action relatedness on memory for intentions in the Virtual Week task
Authors:Antonina Pereira  Judi A Ellis  Jayne E Freeman
Institution:1. Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Lisbon , Lisbon , Portugal aspereira@fm.ul.pt;3. School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences , University of Reading , Reading , UK
Abstract:ABSTRACT

The current study investigated the influence of encoding modality and cue-action relatedness on prospective memory (PM) performance in young and older adults using a modified version of the Virtual Week task. Participants encoded regular and irregular intentions either verbally or by physically performing the action during encoding. For half of the intentions there was a close semantic relation between the retrieval cue and the intended action, while for the remaining intentions the cue and action were semantically unrelated. For irregular tasks, both age groups showed superior PM for related intentions compared to unrelated intentions in both encoding conditions. While older adults retrieved fewer irregular intentions than young adults after verbal encoding, there was no age difference following enactment. Possible mechanisms of enactment and relatedness effects are discussed in the context of current theories of event-based PM.
Keywords:Prospective memory  Aging  Cognition  Enactment  Relatedness  Intentions
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