Graves Lisa V, Moreno Charles C, Seewald Michelle, Holden Heather M, Van Etten Emily J, Uttarwar Vedang, McDonald Carrie R, Delano-Wood Lisa, Bondi Mark W, Woods Steven Paul, Delis Dean C, Gilbert Paul E
San Diego State University/University of California San Diego Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology, San Diego, CA, 92120, USA.
Department of Psychology, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92120, USA.
Arch Clin Neuropsychol. 2017 Dec 1;32(8):972-979. doi: 10.1093/arclin/acx024.
Recall and recognition memory abilities are known to decline with increasing age, yet much of the evidence stems from studies that used simple measures of total target recall or recognition. The California Verbal Learning Test-Second Edition (CVLT-II) includes a new measure of recall discriminability that is analogous to recognition discriminability. These discriminability measures yield more thorough assessments of recall and recognition by accounting for intrusion and false positive errors, respectively. Research also has shown that women outperform men on verbal episodic memory tests. However, gender differences in recall and recognition discriminability and the age-by-gender interaction on these constructs have not been thoroughly examined.
Cognitively healthy adults (N = 223) 18-91 years in age completed the CVLT-II. Multiple regression analyses were conducted to examine effects of age, gender, and the age-by-gender interaction on CVLT-II subtypes of recall and recognition discriminability.
Discriminability scores decreased with increasing age, and women outperformed men. There was an age-by-gender interaction on total, immediate, and free recall discriminability - the negative association between age and scores was stronger in men than in women. Exploratory analyses revealed an inverted U-shaped relationship between age and recall discriminability scores in women.
The present findings support and expand upon the extant literature on aging, gender, and verbal episodic memory, plus describe a novel age-by-gender interaction intrinsic to subtypes of recall discriminability. The findings suggest that methods traditionally used to assess recognition memory function can be used to elucidate age- and gender-related changes in recall ability across the adult lifespan.
众所周知,回忆和识别记忆能力会随着年龄的增长而下降,但大部分证据来自使用简单的总目标回忆或识别测量方法的研究。《加利福尼亚言语学习测验第二版》(CVLT-II)包含一种新的回忆辨别力测量方法,类似于识别辨别力。这些辨别力测量方法通过分别考虑侵入性错误和误报错误,对回忆和识别进行了更全面的评估。研究还表明,在言语情景记忆测试中女性的表现优于男性。然而,回忆和识别辨别力方面的性别差异以及这些结构上的年龄与性别的交互作用尚未得到充分研究。
18至91岁认知健康的成年人(N = 223)完成了CVLT-II。进行了多元回归分析,以检验年龄、性别以及年龄与性别的交互作用对CVLT-II回忆和识别辨别力亚型的影响。
辨别力得分随着年龄的增长而下降,女性的表现优于男性。在总回忆、即时回忆和自由回忆辨别力方面存在年龄与性别的交互作用——年龄与得分之间的负相关在男性中比在女性中更强。探索性分析揭示了女性年龄与回忆辨别力得分之间呈倒U形关系。
本研究结果支持并扩展了关于衰老、性别和言语情景记忆的现有文献,并描述了回忆辨别力亚型中一种新的年龄与性别的交互作用。研究结果表明,传统上用于评估识别记忆功能的方法可用于阐明成年期整个生命周期中与年龄和性别相关的回忆能力变化。