Abstract

Studies examining age effects in autobiographical memory have produced inconsistent results. This study examined whether a set of typical autobiographical memory measures produced equivalent results in a single participant sample. Five memory tests (everyday memory, autobiographical memory from the past year, autobiographical memory from age 11–17, word-cued autobiographical memory, and word-list recall) were administered in a single sample of young and older adults. There was significant variance in the tests’ sensitivity to age: word-cued autobiographical memory produced the largest deficit in older adults, similar in magnitude to word-list recall. In contrast, older adults performed comparatively well on the other measures. The pattern of findings was broadly consistent with the results of previous investigations, suggesting that (1) the results of the different AM tasks are reliable, and (2) variable age effects in the autobiographical memory literature are at least partly due to the use of different tasks, which cannot be considered interchangeable measures of autobiographical memory ability. The results are also consistent with recent work dissociating measures of specificity and detail in autobiographical memory, and suggest that specificity is particularly sensitive to ageing. In contrast, detail is less sensitive to ageing, but is influenced by retention interval and event type. The extent to which retention interval and event type interact with age remains unclear; further research using specially designed autobiographical memory tasks could resolve this issue.

Highlights

  • Retrieval from autobiographical memory (AM) is a complex process, which is widely understood to involve the interaction of several cognitive systems, but which is not yet fully understood

  • Anonymised data have been made publicly available on the Open Science Framework project page, alongside the memory coding schemes and short narrative descriptions of the memories retrieved by each participant in each task

  • Due to between-group differences in IQ and education, we first checked whether these variables were correlated with memory performance, as this could cause difficulty interpreting any effects of age on memory measures

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Summary

Introduction

Retrieval from autobiographical memory (AM) is a complex process, which is widely understood to involve the interaction of several cognitive systems, but which is not yet fully understood. There are a number of different tests used to measure AM, but relatively little is known about what exactly each test measures. Studies examining the effect of ageing on AM have generally treated the various tests as interchangeable, which implies that the primary construct measured by each test is a general underlying AM ability. Converging evidence from different AM tests appears to show that this general AM ability is impaired in older adults [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10].

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