Abstract
This study follows the novel delayed-execute prospective memory paradigm, which involves briefly delaying the execution of an intended action, a task that has been shown to produce substantial age effects. During the ongoing task, sentences were presented, and participants had to answer reading-comprehension questions and general knowledge questions. In the prospective memory task, the participant was to press a key after the presentation of a specific cue in the sentences—but not before a subsequent phase of the ongoing task was reached. In contrast to previous studies using older participants taken from very broadly defined age ranges, this study examines development of delayed-execute prospective memory more precisely by examining a total of 4 age groups: a younger age group (age range = 22–31; n = 27), a young-old age group (age range = 60–69; n = 34), a middle-old age group (age range = 70–79; n = 31), and an old-old age group (age range = 80–91; n = 35). This study investigates the dependence of (age-related) delayed-execute prospective memory performance on working memory capacity by disrupting the phonological loop during the delay period as well as its dependence on neuropsychological processes such as inhibitory control and processing speed. The results show that (a) delayed-execute prospective memory particularly declines within the group of older participants, (b) delayed-execute prospective memory is diminished when working memory load is high during the delay period, and (c) age-related performance in delayed-execute prospective memory may be mediated by inhibitory control. The findings are discussed in the context of the frontal lobe hypothesis of cognitive aging.
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