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Intelligence moderates the benefits of strategy instructions on memory performance: an adult-lifespan examination
Authors:Nikita L. Frankenmolen  Mareike Altgassen  Renée Kessels  Marleen M. de Waal  Julie-Anne Hindriksen  Barbara Verhoeven
Affiliation:1. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands;2. Rehabilitation Centre Klimmendaal, Arnhem, The Netherlands
Abstract:Whether older adults can compensate for their associative memory deficit by using memory strategies efficiently might depend on their general cognitive abilities. This study examined the moderating role of an IQ estimate on the beneficial effects of strategy instructions. A total of 142 participants (aged 18–85 years) received either intentional learning or strategy (“sentence generation”) instructions during encoding of word pairs. Whereas young adults with a lower IQ benefited from strategy instructions, those with a higher IQ did not, presumably because they already use strategies spontaneously. Older adults showed the opposite effect: following strategy instructions, older adults with a higher IQ showed a strong increase in memory performance (approximately achieving the level of younger adults), whereas older adults with a lower IQ did not, suggesting that they have difficulties implementing the provided strategies. These results highlight the importance of the role of IQ in compensating for the aging-related memory decline.
Keywords:Associative memory deficit  strategy use  aging  cognitive reserve  lifespan
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