Department of Psychological Sciences, Kansas State University, 471 Bluemont Hall, 1100 Mid-campus Dr., Manhattan, KS, 66506, USA.
Cogn Res Princ Implic. 2021 Aug 18;6(1):56. doi: 10.1186/s41235-021-00321-1.
How does viewers' knowledge guide their attention while they watch everyday events, how does it affect their memory, and does it change with age? Older adults have diminished episodic memory for everyday events, but intact semantic knowledge. Indeed, research suggests that older adults may rely on their semantic memory to offset impairments in episodic memory, and when relevant knowledge is lacking, older adults' memory can suffer. Yet, the mechanism by which prior knowledge guides attentional selection when watching dynamic activity is unclear. To address this, we studied the influence of knowledge on attention and memory for everyday events in young and older adults by tracking their eyes while they watched videos. The videos depicted activities that older adults perform more frequently than young adults (balancing a checkbook, planting flowers) or activities that young adults perform more frequently than older adults (installing a printer, setting up a video game). Participants completed free recall, recognition, and order memory tests after each video. We found age-related memory deficits when older adults had little knowledge of the activities, but memory did not differ between age groups when older adults had relevant knowledge and experience with the activities. Critically, results showed that knowledge influenced where viewers fixated when watching the videos. Older adults fixated less goal-relevant information compared to young adults when watching young adult activities, but they fixated goal-relevant information similarly to young adults, when watching more older adult activities. Finally, results showed that fixating goal-relevant information predicted free recall of the everyday activities for both age groups. Thus, older adults may use relevant knowledge to more effectively infer the goals of actors, which guides their attention to goal-relevant actions, thus improving their episodic memory for everyday activities.
观众在观看日常事件时,其知识如何引导他们的注意力?这如何影响他们的记忆?并且这种影响是否会随年龄而变化?老年人对日常事件的情节记忆会减退,但语义知识完好无损。事实上,研究表明,老年人可能依赖语义记忆来弥补情节记忆的损伤,而当相关知识缺乏时,老年人的记忆可能会受到影响。然而,先前知识在观看动态活动时引导注意力选择的机制尚不清楚。为了解决这个问题,我们通过跟踪年轻人和老年人在观看视频时的眼睛,研究了知识对日常事件注意力和记忆的影响。这些视频描绘了老年人比年轻人更频繁地进行的活动(如核对支票簿、种花)或年轻人比老年人更频繁地进行的活动(如安装打印机、设置视频游戏)。参与者在观看完每个视频后完成自由回忆、识别和顺序记忆测试。我们发现,当老年人对活动的了解甚少时,会出现与年龄相关的记忆缺陷,但当老年人具有相关知识和经验并且了解活动时,记忆在两个年龄组之间没有差异。重要的是,结果表明知识会影响观众观看视频时的注视点。与年轻人相比,老年人在观看年轻人的活动时,对目标相关信息的注视较少,但当观看更多老年人的活动时,他们对目标相关信息的注视与年轻人相似。最后,结果表明,注视目标相关信息可以预测两个年龄组对日常活动的自由回忆。因此,老年人可能会使用相关知识更有效地推断出演员的目标,这会引导他们的注意力关注目标相关的动作,从而提高他们对日常活动的情节记忆。