Center for Research in Neuropsychology and Cognitive and Behavioural Intervention, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, Univ Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal.
Department of Psychology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
PLoS One. 2020 Aug 10;15(8):e0237340. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0237340. eCollection 2020.
When voluntarily describing their past or future, older adults typically show a reduction in episodic specificity (e.g., including fewer details reflecting a specific event, time and/or place). However, aging has less impact on other types of tasks that place minimal demands on strategic retrieval such as spontaneous thoughts. In the current study, we investigated age-related differences in the episodic specificity of spontaneous thoughts using experimenter-based coding of thought descriptions. Additionally, we tested whether an episodic specificity induction, which increases episodic detail during deliberate retrieval of events in young and older adults, has the same effect under spontaneous retrieval. Twenty-four younger and 24 healthy older adults performed two counterbalanced sessions including a video, the episodic specificity or control induction, and a vigilance task. In the episodic specificity induction, participants recalled the details of the video while in the control they solved math exercises. The impact of this manipulation on the episodic specificity of spontaneous thoughts was assessed in the subsequent vigilance task, in which participants were randomly stopped to describe their thoughts and classify them as deliberate/spontaneous. We found no differences in episodic specificity between age groups in spontaneous thoughts, supporting the prediction that automatic retrieval attenuates the episodic specificity decrease in aging. The lack of age differences was present regardless of the induction, showing no interactions. For the induction, we also found no main effect, indicating that automatic retrieval bypasses event construction and accesses pre-stored events. Overall, our evidence suggests that spontaneous retrieval is a promising strategy to support episodic specificity in aging.
当老年人自愿描述过去或未来时,通常会表现出情节特异性的减少(例如,包括更少反映特定事件、时间和/或地点的细节)。然而,与其他类型的任务相比,衰老对那些对策略检索要求较低的任务(如自发思维)的影响较小。在当前的研究中,我们使用基于实验者的思维描述编码来研究自发思维的情节特异性的年龄相关差异。此外,我们还测试了情节特异性诱导是否会对年轻和老年成年人在故意检索事件时增加情节细节产生相同的效果。24 名年轻参与者和 24 名健康老年人参加了两个平衡的会话,包括一个视频、情节特异性或对照诱导以及一个警戒任务。在情节特异性诱导中,参与者回忆视频的细节,而在对照中,他们则解决数学练习。在随后的警戒任务中评估了这种操作对自发思维的情节特异性的影响,在该任务中,参与者会被随机停止以描述他们的想法并将其分类为故意/自发。我们没有发现自发思维的情节特异性在年龄组之间存在差异,这支持了自动检索会减轻衰老中情节特异性下降的预测。这种无年龄差异的情况与诱导无关,没有交互作用。对于诱导,我们也没有发现主要效应,这表明自动检索绕过了事件构建并访问了预先存储的事件。总体而言,我们的证据表明,自发检索是支持衰老中情节特异性的一种很有前景的策略。