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Older adults catch up to younger adults on a learning and memory task that involves collaborative social interaction
Authors:B. J. Derksen  M. C. Duff  K. Weldon  J. Zhang  K. D. Zamba  D. Tranel
Affiliation:1. Department of Neurology, Division of Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA, USA;2. Department of Communication Sciences &3. Disorders, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA;4. Department of Biostatistics, University of Iowa College of Public Health, Iowa City, IA, USA
Abstract:Learning and memory abilities tend to decline as people age. The current study examines the question of whether a learning situation that emphasises collaborative social interaction might help older persons overcome age-related learning and memory changes and thus perform similarly to younger persons. Younger and Older participants (n = 34 in each group) completed the Barrier Task (BT), a game-like social interaction where partners work together to develop labels for a set of abstract tangrams. Participants were also administered standard clinical neuropsychological measures of memory, on which the Older group showed expected inferiority to the Younger group. On the BT, the Older group performed less well than the Younger group early on, but as the task progressed, the performance of the Older group caught up and became statistically indistinguishable from that of the Younger group. These results can be taken to suggest that a learning milieu characterised by collaborative social interaction can attenuate some of the typical memory disadvantages associated with being older.
Keywords:Ageing  Social interaction  Learning  Memory  Collaborative discourse
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