Abstract

Memories related to ingroup members are remembered more accurately than those related to outgroup members. However, little is known about the age-dependent differences in neural mechanisms underlying the retrieval of memories shared with ingroup or outgroup members that are categorized by age-group membership. The present functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study investigated this issue. Healthy young and older adults participated in a 2-day experiment. On the first day outside fMRI, participants were presented with words by unfamiliar persons in movie clips and exchanged each word with persons belonging to the same age group (SAG) or different age group (DAG). On the second day during fMRI, participants were randomly presented with learned and new words one by one, and they judged whether each word had been encoded with either SAG or DAG members or neither. fMRI results demonstrated that an age-dependent decrease in successful retrieval activation of memories presented by DAG was identified in the anterior temporal lobe (ATL) and hippocampus, whereas with memories presented by SAG, an age-dependent decrease in activation was not found in any regions. In addition, an age-dependent decrease in functional connectivity was significant between the hippocampus/ATL and posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS) during the successful retrieval of memories encoded with the DAG people. The “other”-related mechanisms including the hippocampus, ATL, and pSTS with memories learned with the outgroup members could decrease in older adults, whereas with memories learned with the ingroup members, the “self”-related mechanisms could be relatively preserved in older adults.

Highlights

  • Memories for persons who belong to the same age group (SAG) as ingroup members are remembered more accurately than memories for persons who belong to the different age group (DAG) as outgroup members

  • An agedependent decrease in functional connectivity of the right hippocampus or the right anterior temporal lobe (ATL) with the right posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS) was significant during the successful retrieval of source memories encoded with the DAG people as outgroup members, whereas a significant aging effect on functional connectivity with the right hippocampus or the right ATL was not found in any region during the successful retrieval of source memories encoded with the SAG people as ingroup members

  • These findings suggest that functional networks including the hippocampus related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) Study of Social Memories to the recollection process of episodic memories, the ATL related to the processing of social knowledge, and the pSTS related to the processing of other people could be impaired by aging in the recollection of memories associated with the DAG people as outgroup members

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Summary

Introduction

Memories for persons who belong to the same age group (SAG) as ingroup members are remembered more accurately than memories for persons who belong to the different age group (DAG) as outgroup members (for review, see Rhodes and Anastasi, 2012) This enhancing effect on memory is known as the own-age bias, which is a type of intergroup bias (for review, see Molenberghs and Louis, 2018). Little is known about how neural mechanisms underlying the recollection of memories related to the SAG people as an ingroup member and the DAG people as an outgroup member are changed by aging.

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