Abstract

Introduction. Age-related changes in cognitive functions are caused by various processes: degrading inhibitory control, decrease in the volume of working memory, or a slowdown in the speed of thought processes. However, there is no unanimous opinion on the dynamics of these processes and their interactions yet. Based on this, our research goal became finding the temporal dynamics and individual relationship of the effects of proactive interference (Retrival-Induced Forgeting (RIF)) and learning to remember (Retrieval-Based Learning (RBL)) depending on the content of the presented stimuli as well as the age-related specifics of memorization when training the short-term visual memory. Materials and methods. Memory training was carried out in a mode independently organized by the study participants using a computerized memorization program in a proactive interference model, including five sessions of visual presentation of stimuli. University students participated in the first part of the study, aimed at clarifying the meaning of the content of two different sets of stimuli, (220 people, 20.4 ± 1.9 years old), whereas second part aimed to determine the age-related characteristics of visual short-term memory training in a group of students, (70 subjects, 21.7±2.5 years) and a group of elderly women (25 subjects, 64.4±6.3 years). Research results. The results of the memory trace retrieval analysis showed that the RIF effect dominates over the RBL effect regardless of the content of the stimuli, but at different rates of its development depending on the set of stimuli used. With significant individual diversity in the combination of memory strategies, the RIF effect dominated at the initial stage of stimulus presentation (67.6% of cases) and gradually replaced by RBL (56.2% in the fifth run of the experiment). Analysis of age-related characteristics of the effectiveness of short-term visual memory training showed that when it is independently organized, maintaining activity is observed in 32% of university students and 50% in the elderly group. Along with this. Only average of ten approaches to complete this task accompanied by a further decrease in the number of training participants. Comparison of the results of the first three training sessions revealed a significant increase in the memory index in both groups compared to the initial value and the presence of a RIF effect with a further more rapid increase in the efficiency of memorization in students. Conclusion. Proactive interference while memorization of visual stimuli repeatedly presented in five sessions, appears regardless of their content, age of the subjects and memorization training. The efficiency of memorization due to training grows faster in the group of students and accompanied by the combination of the RIF and RBL effects that is characterized by individual diversity without a significant effect on the final result of the memory retrieval.

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