Abstract

Aging has traditionally been related to impairments in name retrieval. These impairments have usually been explained by a phonological transmission deficit hypothesis or by an inhibitory deficit hypothesis. This decline can, however, be modulated by the educational level of the sample. This study analyzed the possible role of these approaches in explaining both object and face naming impairments during aging. Older adults with low and high educational level and young adults with high educational level were asked to repeatedly name objects or famous people using the semantic-blocking paradigm. We compared naming when exemplars were presented in a semantically homogeneous or in a semantically heterogeneous context. Results revealed significantly slower rates of both face and object naming in the homogeneous context (i.e., semantic interference), with a stronger effect for face naming. Interestingly, the group of older adults with a lower educational level showed an increased semantic interference effect during face naming. These findings suggest the joint work of the two mechanisms proposed to explain age-related naming difficulties, i.e., the inhibitory deficit and the transmission deficit hypothesis. Therefore, the stronger vulnerability to semantic interference in the lower educated older adult sample would possibly point to a failure in the inhibitory mechanisms in charge of interference resolution, as proposed by the inhibitory deficit hypothesis. In addition, the fact that this interference effect was mainly restricted to face naming and not to object naming would be consistent with the increased age-related difficulties during proper name retrieval, as suggested by the transmission deficit hypothesis.

Highlights

  • Memory problems are possibly one of the most frequent complaints reported by older people [1]

  • We evaluated the specific influence of the two main hypotheses that have been proposed to explain naming problems in aging. These difficulties have been traditionally explained by a phonological transmission deficit hypothesis [13,39,40] or by an inhibitory deficit hypothesis [42,43]

  • We considered that these two deficits might influence the performance of older adults in different ways in the context of a semantic blocking paradigm [32,45,49]

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Summary

Introduction

Memory problems are possibly one of the most frequent complaints reported by older people [1]. Scientific research has repeatedly demonstrated that aging does not involve a global decay in memory functions but instead produces different changes in specific aspects of memory [2]. A number of studies have shown that episodic memory progressively declines with age [3,4,5,6], many data suggest that different aspects of semantic.

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