98%
921
2 minutes
20
It is well established that aging is associated with declines in episodic memory. In recent years, an emphasis has emerged on the development of behavioral tasks and the identification of biomarkers that are predictive of cognitive decline in healthy as well as pathological aging. Here, we describe a memory task designed to assess the accuracy of discrimination ability for the locations of objects. Object locations were initially encoded incidentally, and appeared in a single space against a 5 × 7 grid. During retrieval, subjects viewed repeated object-location pairings, displacements of 1, 2, 3, or 4 grid spaces, and maximal corner-to-opposite-corner displacements. Subjects were tasked with judging objects in this second viewing as having retained their original location, or having moved. Performance on a task such as this is thought to rely on the capacity of the individual to perform hippocampus-mediated pattern separation. We report a performance deficit associated with a physically healthy aged group compared to young adults specific to trials with low mnemonic interference. Additionally, for aged adults, performance on the task was correlated with performance on the delayed recall portion of the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT), a neuropsychological test sensitive to hippocampal dysfunction. In line with prior work, dividing the aged group into unimpaired and impaired subgroups based on RAVLT Delayed Recall scores yielded clearly distinguishable patterns of performance, with the former subgroup performing comparably to young adults, and the latter subgroup showing generally impaired memory performance even with minimal interference. This study builds on existing tasks used in the field, and contributes a novel paradigm for differentiation of healthy from possible pathological aging, and may thus provide an avenue for early detection of age-related cognitive decline.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3968903 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hipo.22224 | DOI Listing |
Memory
August 2025
Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA, USA.
People often save information by storing it on a computer or smartphone for future use, thus preserving cognitive economy and reducing processing demands [Risko, E. F., & Gilbert, S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMem Cognit
August 2025
Department of Psychology, University of Kaiserslautern-Landau (RPTU), 76829, Landau, Germany.
Information relevant to survival has been found to be prioritized in memory, a finding often interpreted as reflecting evolved mnemonic mechanisms. While much research has focused on survival processing at encoding, the effect of constraining retrieval to the survival condition on later memory performance remains less well studied. Two experiments serve to examine whether survival-constrained retrieval in an intermediate source-constrained retrieval test impairs or improves recognition of words in a final memory test, depending on whether intermediate retrieval was constrained to the condition in which the words were initially encoded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Bull
September 2025
Department of Electrical, Electronic, and Information Engineering "Guglielmo Marconi", University of Bologna, Cesena, Italy.
The hippocampus' ability to encode new information while simultaneously avoiding disruptive interference poses a fundamental challenge to cognitive neuroscience. It has been supposed that dynamical changes in acetylcholine (ACh), a neurotransmitter involved in learning and memory, can facilitate a shifting between encoding and retrieval: high ACh levels promote encoding by enhancing synaptic plasticity while concurrently suppressing retrieval-related networks; low ACh levels favor retrieval, suppressing external inputs and synaptic potentiation. The primary source of ACh in the hippocampus, the medial septum/diagonal band of Broca, is also a key determinant of hippocampal theta: these two aspects could therefore be integrated, with ACh and theta fluctuations modulating encoding and retrieval phases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Behav
June 2025
Department of Psychiatry, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Background: Mnemonic discrimination (MD) involves distinguishing new stimuli from highly similar memories; it is impaired in the elderly and individuals with neuropsychiatric disorders and may also probe hippocampal dentate gyrus function. Measuring MD is, therefore, highly relevant; however, the gold-standard MD test, the mnemonic similarity task (MST), is rarely used in clinical research. Thus, it would be useful to develop a novel MD index applicable to recognition memory tasks that are commonly used in clinical research.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Educ
June 2025
Office of Undergraduate Medical Education, University of Calgary, Canada.
Health Professional Education (HPE) programmes, such as mentorship, are widely regarded as being advantageous to the personal and professional development of clinicians and trainees. Involvement in a mentoring relationship is associated with positive outcomes for both mentees and mentors, including improved career preparation, increased career success, higher job satisfaction and reduced risk of burnout. Despite these data, a minority of trainees report having a mentor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF