Abstract

It is increasingly recognised that spatial contextual long-term memory (LTM) prepares neural activity for guiding visuo-spatial attention in a proactive manner. In the current study, we investigated whether the decline in explicit memory observed in healthy ageing would compromise this mechanism. We compared the behavioural performance of younger and older participants on learning new contextual memories, on orienting visual attention based on these learnt contextual associations, and on explicit recall of contextual memories. We found a striking dissociation between older versus younger participants in the relationship between the ability to retrieve contextual memories versus the ability to use these to guide attention to enhance performance on a target-detection task. Older participants showed significant deficits in the explicit retrieval task, but their behavioural benefits from memory-based orienting of attention were equivalent to those in young participants. Furthermore, memory-based orienting correlated significantly with explicit contextual LTM in younger adults but not in older adults. These results suggest that explicit memory deficits in ageing might not compromise initial perception and encoding of events. Importantly, the results also shed light on the mechanisms of memory-guided attention, suggesting that explicit contextual memories are not necessary.

Highlights

  • Neural systems supporting explicit long-term contextual memory (LTM) are often reported to decline in healthy ageing (Dennis & Cabeza, 2008; Dew & Giovanello, 2010; Fleischman, Wilson, Gabrieli, Bienias, & Bennett, 2004; Old & Naveh-Benjamin, 2008)

  • We have developed an experimental paradigm to investigate how contextual LTM for the location of objects in scenes can guide spatial attention to target events occurring in previously learned locations (Summerfield, Lepsien, Gitelman, Mesulam, & Nobre, 2006)

  • In the current investigation we tested for decline in explicit contextual LTM in healthy older participants compared to younger participants, and we investigated whether this memory decline would compromise the ability to optimise perceptual processing according to previous experience

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Summary

Introduction

Neural systems supporting explicit long-term contextual memory (LTM) are often reported to decline in healthy ageing (Dennis & Cabeza, 2008; Dew & Giovanello, 2010; Fleischman, Wilson, Gabrieli, Bienias, & Bennett, 2004; Old & Naveh-Benjamin, 2008). Older adults show similar advantages as younger adults for locating target objects that appear at locations compatible with their real-world placement (Neider & Kramer, 2011). They have been shown to use contextual information to guide search in a Digit Matrix Scanning Task (Schmitter-Edgecombe & Nissley, 2002) and in contextual cueing paradigms (Howard, Dennis, & Howard, 2005; Merrill, Conners, Roskos, Klinger, & Klinger, 2013). At least one recent study using the contextual-cueing paradigm has failed to replicate benefits from implicitly learned associations (Smyth & Shanks, 2011)

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