Bowen Holly J, Gallant Sara N, Moon Diane H
Department of Psychology, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX, United States.
Leonard Davis School of Gerontology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
Front Psychol. 2020 Jul 31;11:1764. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01764. eCollection 2020.
An important feature of the memory system is the ability to forget, but aging is associated with declines in the ability to intentionally forget potentially due to declines in cognitive control. Despite cognitive deficits, older adults are sensitive to affective manipulations, such as reward motivation, and reward anticipation can improve older adults' memory performance. The goal of the current studies was to examine the effect of reward motivation on directed remembering and forgetting. Participants were healthy CloudResearch/Turk Prime workers aged 18-35 and 60-85. In Experiment 1, we conducted a typical item-method directed forgetting task using neutral words presented one at a time followed by a to-be-remembered (TBR) or to-be-forgotten (TBF) cue. A recognition memory test followed that included all words from the encoding task, as well as new words. We replicated prior findings of better memory for TBR compared to TBF items, but not typical age-related differences in recognition of TBF items. In Experiments 2-4, we repeated this paradigm except that in the second block of trials, each word was presented with a high ($0.75) or low ($0.01) reward cue indicating the value that could be earned if the item was successfully Remembered or Forgotten (depending on cue). During recognition, correct responses to target items (both TBR and TBF) resulted in the associated reward, but incorrect "old" responses resulted in a loss of $0.50. In three experiments, high rewards led to better memory for younger and older adults compared to low rewards, regardless of the directed cue to remember or forget the word. In Experiments 3 and 4, older adults showed typical deficits in directed forgetting, but this was across reward conditions. For older adults, there was no evidence that including reward motivation improved cognitive control abilities as high value reward anticipation did not improve directed forgetting. Instead, in line with hypotheses, high compared to low value reward anticipation leads to engagement of processes that result in better memory regardless of the TBR or TBF cue, and reward anticipation bolsters memory in a relatively automatic, rather than strategic, fashion that overrides one's ability to cognitively control encoding processes.
记忆系统的一个重要特征是遗忘能力,但衰老与有意遗忘能力的下降有关,这可能是由于认知控制能力的下降所致。尽管存在认知缺陷,但老年人对情感操纵很敏感,比如奖励动机,而奖励预期可以改善老年人的记忆表现。当前研究的目的是检验奖励动机对定向记忆和遗忘的影响。参与者是年龄在18 - 35岁和60 - 85岁之间的健康的CloudResearch/Turk Prime工作人员。在实验1中,我们进行了一项典型的项目法定向遗忘任务,使用中性词逐一呈现,随后是一个待记忆(TBR)或待遗忘(TBF)提示。接着进行了一项识别记忆测试,其中包括编码任务中的所有单词以及新单词。我们重复了之前的研究结果,即与TBF项目相比,对TBR项目的记忆更好,但在TBF项目的识别上没有典型的年龄相关差异。在实验2 - 4中,我们重复了这个范式,只是在试验的第二个区块中,每个单词都伴随着一个高(0.75美元)或低(0.01美元)的奖励提示,表明如果该项目被成功记住或遗忘(取决于提示)可以获得的价值。在识别过程中,对目标项目(TBR和TBF)的正确反应会带来相关奖励,但错误的“旧”反应会导致损失0.50美元。在三个实验中,与低奖励相比,高奖励使年轻人和老年人的记忆都更好,无论定向提示是记住还是忘记单词。在实验3和4中,老年人在定向遗忘方面表现出典型的缺陷,但这在所有奖励条件下都存在。对于老年人来说,没有证据表明包含奖励动机能提高认知控制能力,因为高价值奖励预期并没有改善定向遗忘。相反,与假设一致的是,与低价值奖励预期相比,高价值奖励预期会引发一些过程,这些过程会导致无论TBR或TBF提示如何都有更好的记忆,并且奖励预期以一种相对自动而非策略性的方式增强记忆,这种方式会凌驾于个体认知控制编码过程的能力之上。