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Knowledge of Memory Aging Across the Lifespan
Authors:Katie E. Cherry  Blakeley Blanchard  Erin J. Walker  Emily A. Smitherman  Bethany A. Lyon
Affiliation:1. Louisiana State Universitypskatie@lsu.edu;3. St. Joseph's Academy;4. Louisiana State University
Abstract:ABSTRACT. The authors examined knowledge of normal and pathological memory aging in a lifespan sample of 198 individuals who ranged in age from 13 to 88 years. Participants completed the Knowledge of Memory Aging Questionnaire (Cherry, Brigman, Hawley, & Reese, 2003). The authors hypothesized that high school students would be less knowledgeable about memory aging issues than college students, middle-aged, and community-dwelling older adults. Consistent with this hypothesis, response accuracy was lower for high school students compared to their older counterparts. Follow-up analyses revealed that high school students’ responses to a subset of questions that tap ageist views of adult cognition were less accurate than the other age groups, implying a response bias toward stereotypical images of memory aging. Implications for research and the design of instructional materials to increase people's knowledge about normative changes in adult cognition are discussed.
Keywords:adult cognition  memory aging knowledge  normal and pathological memory deficits  age-associated memory impairment  Alzheimer's disease  ageism
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