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Characterizing age-related changes in remembering the past and imagining the future.
222
Citations
18
References
2010
Year
AgingCognitionHuman MemoryExplicit MemorySocial SciencesPsychologyEpisodic MemoryDevelopmental PsychologyAge-related ChangesCognitive DevelopmentMemoryPast EventsLifespan DevelopmentGerontologyCognitive ScienceComparable Specificity ReductionsAdult DevelopmentExperimental PsychologyImplicit MemoryMemory LossLater AdulthoodOlder AdultsMedicine
When remembering past events or imagining possible future events, older adults generate fewer episodic details than do younger adults. These results support the constructive episodic simulation hypothesis: deficits in retrieving episodic details underlie changes during memory and imagination. To examine the extent of this age-related reduction in specificity, we compared performance on memory and imagination tasks to a picture description task that does not require episodic memory. In two experiments, older adults exhibited comparable specificity reductions across all conditions. These findings emphasize the need to consider age-related changes in imagination and memory in a broader theoretical context.
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