Hartley J T, Walsh D A
J Gerontol. 1980 Nov;35(6):899-905. doi: 10.1093/geronj/35.6.899.
In a single-trial, free-recall experiment, older and younger adults received either 0, 5, or 50 cents for each word recalled from a 24-word list. Each subject served in each of the incentive conditions. It was hypothesized that monetary incentive would increase the degree of task involvement for older subjects and result in a noticeable reduction in the magnitude of age-related performance differences. In accord with previous investigations, incentive was expected to have no effect on the performance of younger subjects. The results showed that overall recall was not facilitated by incentive, but there was an increase in the rate of recall when incentive was available. This effect of incentive was the same for older and younger subjects, and performance deficits observed for the older subjects were not reduced by incentive. Age differences in recall were largely confined to the first 30 seconds of the recall period, suggesting that age-related differences in willingness or ability to engage in extended memory search were not the source of age-related performance differences. In addition, performance declined steadily across each successive list learned for the older learners, a result we interpreted in terms of susceptibility to interference from prior-list learning.
在一项单次试验的自由回忆实验中,老年和年轻成年人从一份包含24个单词的列表中每回忆起一个单词会获得0美分、5美分或50美分。每个受试者都在每种激励条件下参与实验。研究假设金钱激励会提高老年受试者的任务投入程度,并导致与年龄相关的表现差异幅度显著降低。与之前的研究一致,预计激励对年轻受试者的表现没有影响。结果表明,激励并未促进总体回忆,但在有激励的情况下回忆率有所提高。激励对老年和年轻受试者的影响相同,且激励并未减少老年受试者观察到的表现缺陷。回忆中的年龄差异主要局限于回忆期的前30秒,这表明在进行长时间记忆搜索的意愿或能力方面与年龄相关的差异并非与年龄相关的表现差异的根源。此外,对于老年学习者,在学习的每个连续列表中表现都稳步下降,我们将这一结果解释为易受先前列表学习干扰的影响。