Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Gerontology. 2013;59(2):143-51. doi: 10.1159/000342198. Epub 2012 Sep 13.
Recent research has demonstrated commonalities between remembering past events and imagining future events. Behavioral studies have revealed that remembering the past and imagining the future depend on shared cognitive processes, whereas neuropsychological and neuroimaging studies have shown that many of the same brain regions are involved in both remembering the past and imagining the future. Here, we review recent cognitive and neuroimaging studies that examine remembering the past and imagining the future in elderly adults. These studies document significant changes in elderly adults' capacities to imagine future events that are correlated with their memory deficits; most strikingly, older adults tend to remember the past and imagine the future with less episodic detail than younger adults. These findings are in line with the constructive episodic simulation hypothesis [Schacter and Addis: Phil Trans R Soc B 2007;362:773-786], which holds that past and future events draw on similar information and rely on similar underlying processes, and that episodic memory supports the construction of future events by extracting and recombining stored information into a simulation of a novel event. At the same time, however, recent data indicate that non-episodic factors also contribute to age-related changes in remembering the past and imagining the future. We conclude by considering a number of questions and challenges concerning the interpretation of age-related changes in remembering and imagining, as well as functional implications of this research for everyday concerns of older adults.
最近的研究表明,回忆过去的事件和想象未来的事件之间存在共同之处。行为研究表明,回忆过去和想象未来依赖于共享的认知过程,而神经心理学和神经影像学研究表明,许多相同的大脑区域同时参与了回忆过去和想象未来。在这里,我们回顾了最近的认知和神经影像学研究,这些研究考察了老年人对过去的记忆和对未来的想象。这些研究记录了老年人想象未来事件的能力发生了显著变化,这种变化与他们的记忆缺陷有关;最引人注目的是,老年人往往比年轻人更少地以情节细节来回忆过去和想象未来。这些发现与构建情节模拟假说一致[Schacter 和 Addis: Phil Trans R Soc B 2007;362:773-786],该假说认为过去和未来的事件都利用了相似的信息,并依赖于相似的潜在过程,而情节记忆通过提取和重组存储的信息来支持未来事件的构建,从而模拟一个新的事件。然而,最近的数据表明,非情节因素也会导致老年人在回忆过去和想象未来方面的年龄相关变化。我们最后考虑了一些关于回忆和想象的年龄相关变化的解释以及这项研究对老年人日常关注的功能意义方面的问题和挑战。