An older adult advantage in autobiographical recall

Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn. 2023 Jul;30(4):555-581. doi: 10.1080/13825585.2022.2063789. Epub 2022 Apr 14.

Abstract

This pre-registered online study aimed to measure the effect of environmental support on age-differences in autobiographical memory alongside memory for images. Young and older adults reported autobiographical memories about which they regularly thought (high environmental support through practice) or that were experimentally cued to be mundane (low environmental support). The support manipulation was also applied to descriptions of images that were produced whilst images remained on screen (high support) or produced from memory (low support). In line with existing theory, support disproportionately benefitted older adults in the quantity of information produced. However, analysis of the autobiographical descriptions showed no age deficit in reporting episodic detail, in contrast to much of the existing literature. A second group of young and older adults also evaluated the descriptions produced, and older adults' descriptions were consistently rated as higher quality than young adults' descriptions across several dimensions, such as vividness and clarity. An unplanned meta-analysis was conducted to assess if a publication bias existed in the literature favoring the reporting of age-deficits in producing episodic detail in autobiographical memory: there was no evidence for a bias and the modal result of age deficits was generally supported. A key distinction is that the current study was conducted online - evidence is presented to argue that older adults may perform better at autobiographical memory tasks outside the lab.

Keywords: Aging; Autobiographical Memory; Environmental Support; Episodic Detail; Meta-Analysis.

Publication types

  • Meta-Analysis

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Cues
  • Humans
  • Memory, Episodic*
  • Mental Recall*