Wank Aubrey A, Andrews-Hanna Jessica R, Grilli Matthew D
Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, 1503 E University Blvd., Tucson, AZ, 85721, USA.
Cognitive Science, University of Arizona, 1503 E University Blvd, AZ, 85721, Tucson, USA.
Mem Cognit. 2021 Apr;49(3):422-437. doi: 10.3758/s13421-020-01098-2. Epub 2020 Sep 23.
Episodic autobiographical memories (EAMs) can come to mind through two retrieval routes, one direct (i.e., an EAM is retrieved almost instantaneously) and the other generative (i.e., by using autobiographical/general knowledge to cue an EAM). It is well established that normal cognitive aging is associated with a reduction in the retrieval of EAMs, but the contributions of direct or generative reconstruction to the age-related shift toward general memories remain unknown. Prior studies also have not clarified whether similar cognitive mechanisms facilitate the ability to successfully reconstruct EAMs and elaborate them in event-specific detail. To address these gaps in knowledge, young and older participants were asked to reconstruct EAMs using a "think-aloud" paradigm and then describe in detail a subset of retrieved memories. An adapted scoring procedure was implemented to categorize memories accessed during reconstruction, and the Autobiographical Interview (AI) scoring procedure was utilized for elaboration scoring. Results indicated that in comparison with young adults, older adults not only engaged in direct retrieval less often than young adults but they also more often ended generative retrieval at general events instead of EAMs. The ability to elaborate EAMs with internal details was positively associated with the ability to use generative retrieval to reconstruct EAMs in both young and older adults, but there was no relationship between internal detail elaboration and direct retrieval in either age group. Taken together, these results indicate age-related differences in direct and generative retrieval contribute to overgeneral autobiographical memory and they support a connection between generative retrieval and elaboration.
情景式自传体记忆(EAMs)可以通过两种提取途径进入脑海,一种是直接提取(即几乎瞬间就能提取出一个EAM),另一种是生成性提取(即利用自传体/一般知识来提示一个EAM)。众所周知,正常的认知老化与EAMs提取的减少有关,但直接提取或生成性重构对与年龄相关的向一般记忆转变的贡献仍然未知。先前的研究也没有阐明类似的认知机制是否有助于成功重构EAMs并在特定事件细节中对其进行详细阐述的能力。为了填补这些知识空白,要求年轻和年长的参与者使用“边想边说”范式重构EAMs,然后详细描述一部分提取出的记忆。实施了一种经过调整的评分程序,对重构过程中提取的记忆进行分类,并使用自传体访谈(AI)评分程序进行详细阐述评分。结果表明,与年轻人相比,老年人不仅比年轻人更少进行直接提取,而且他们也更常在一般事件而非EAMs处结束生成性提取。在年轻人和老年人中,用内部细节详细阐述EAMs的能力与利用生成性提取重构EAMs的能力呈正相关,但在两个年龄组中,内部细节阐述与直接提取之间均无关联。综上所述,这些结果表明,直接提取和生成性提取中与年龄相关的差异导致了过度概括的自传体记忆,并且它们支持了生成性提取与详细阐述之间的联系。