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自我报告的听力困难对老年人记忆协作的影响。

The Impact of Self-Reported Hearing Difficulties on Memory Collaboration in Older Adults.

作者信息

Barnier Amanda J, Harris Celia B, Morris Thomas, Strutt Paul, Savage Greg

机构信息

Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Cognition and Its Disorders, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia.

Department of Cognitive Science, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia.

出版信息

Front Neurosci. 2019 Aug 27;13:870. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2019.00870. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Cognitive scientists and philosophers recently have highlighted the value of thinking about people at risk of or living with dementia as intertwined parts of broader cognitive systems that involve their spouse, family, friends, or carers. By this view, we rely on people and things around us to "scaffold" mental processes such as memory. In the current study, we identified 39 long-married, older adult couples who are part of the Australian Imaging Biomarkers and Lifestyle (AIBL) Study of Ageing; all were cognitively healthy but half were subjective memory complainers. During two visits to their homes 1 week apart, we assessed husbands' and wives' cognitive performance across a range of everyday memory tasks working alone (Week 1) versus together (Week 2), including a Friends Task where they provided first and last names of their friends and acquaintances. As reported elsewhere, elderly couples recalled many more friends' names working together compared to alone. Couples who remembered successfully together used well-developed, rich, sensitive, and dynamic communication strategies to boost each other's recall. However, if one or both spouses self-reported mild-to-moderate or severe hearing difficulties (56% of husbands, 31% of wives), couples received less benefit from collaboration. Our findings imply that hearing loss may disrupt collaborative support structures that couples (and other intimate communicative partners) hone over decades together. We discuss the possibility that, cut off from the social world that scaffolds them, hearing loss may place older adults at greater risk of cognitive decline and dementia.

摘要

认知科学家和哲学家最近强调,将有患痴呆症风险或患有痴呆症的人视为更广泛认知系统中相互交织的部分,这些系统涉及他们的配偶、家人、朋友或护理人员,具有重要价值。按照这种观点,我们依靠周围的人和事物来“支撑”诸如记忆等心理过程。在当前的研究中,我们从澳大利亚衰老成像生物标志物和生活方式(AIBL)研究中确定了39对结婚时间较长的老年夫妇;他们在认知方面均保持健康,但其中一半存在主观记忆问题。在相隔1周的两次家访中,我们评估了丈夫和妻子在一系列日常记忆任务中的认知表现,先是单独完成任务(第1周),然后是共同完成任务(第2周),其中包括一项朋友任务,他们要说出朋友和熟人的名字。正如在其他地方所报道的,老年夫妇共同完成任务时能回忆起更多朋友的名字。共同成功回忆起朋友名字的夫妇运用了成熟、丰富、敏感且动态的沟通策略来互相促进回忆。然而,如果一方或双方配偶自我报告有轻度至中度或重度听力困难(56%的丈夫,31%的妻子),那么夫妇从合作中获得的益处就会减少。我们的研究结果表明,听力损失可能会破坏夫妇(以及其他亲密交流伙伴)几十年来共同磨练的协作支持结构。我们讨论了这样一种可能性,即由于与支撑他们认知的社交世界隔绝,听力损失可能会使老年人面临认知能力下降和患痴呆症的更大风险。

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