Item and Associative Memory Decline in Healthy Aging

Author(s):  
Nancy A. Dennis ◽  
John M. McCormick-Huhn
2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (11) ◽  
pp. 1386-1395
Author(s):  
Emily F. Hittner ◽  
Jacquelyn E. Stephens ◽  
Nicholas A. Turiano ◽  
Denis Gerstorf ◽  
Margie E. Lachman ◽  
...  

Memory decline is a concern for aging populations across the globe. Positive affect plays an important role in healthy aging, but its link with memory decline has remained unclear. In the present study, we examined associations between positive affect (i.e., feeling enthusiastic, attentive, proud, active) and memory (i.e., immediate and delayed recall), drawing from a 9-year longitudinal study of a national sample of 991 middle-age and older U.S. adults. Results revealed that positive affect was associated with less memory decline across 9 years when analyses controlled for age, gender, education, depression, negative affect, and extraversion. Findings generalized across another measure that assessed additional facets of positive affect, across different (but not all) facets of positive affect and memory, and across age, gender, and education; findings did not emerge for negative affect. Reverse longitudinal associations between memory and positive affect were not significant. Possible pathways linking positive affect and memory functioning are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (S10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina Solé‐Padullés ◽  
Lídia Vaqué‐Alcázar ◽  
Kilian Abellaneda‐Pérez ◽  
Emilio Ros ◽  
David Bartres‐Faz

2015 ◽  
Vol 1622 ◽  
pp. 137-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Bauer ◽  
M. Toepper ◽  
H. Gebhardt ◽  
B. Gallhofer ◽  
G. Sammer

2012 ◽  
Vol 197 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 135-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry Silver ◽  
Craig Goodman ◽  
Warren B. Bilker

2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (4S_Part_14) ◽  
pp. P529-P530
Author(s):  
Rachel Yotter ◽  
Jimit Doshi ◽  
Vanessa Clark ◽  
Jitka Sojkova ◽  
Yungui Zhou ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Wei-Chun Wang ◽  
Sander M. Daselaar ◽  
Roberto Cabeza

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sivaniya Subramaniapillai ◽  
Sricharana Rajagopal ◽  
Elizabeth Ankudowich ◽  
Stamatoula Pasvanis ◽  
Bratislav Misic ◽  
...  

Healthy aging is associated with episodic memory decline. However, little is known about sex differences in the effect of normative aging on memory-related brain network dynamics. Here, we used a data-driven multivariate partial least squares (PLS) connectivity analysis to identify similarities and differences in the effect of biological sex on age- and memory-related differences in task-based fMRI connectivity during encoding and retrieval of face-location associations (spatial context memory). Aging was associated with episodic memory decline in both sexes, but there were no significant sex or sex-by-age interactions in memory performance. The connectivity results show that men exhibited greater between-network connectivity with advanced age, which was detrimental to memory performance. Women exhibited reduced connectivity between visual and higher order cognitive networks with advanced age, which was detrimental to memory performance. Therefore, there are sex differences in the effect of age on episodic memory-related connectivity.


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