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1.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) ; 68(1): 75-82, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25017768

ABSTRACT

Despite the growing interest in the ability of foreseeing (episodic future thinking), it is still unclear how healthy people construct possible future scenarios. We suggest that different future thoughts require different processes of scene construction. Thirty-five participants were asked to imagine desirable and less desirable future events. Imagining desirable events increased the ease of scene construction, the frequency of life scripts, the number of internal details, and the clarity of sensorial and spatial temporal information. The initial description of general personal knowledge lasted longer in undesirable than in desirable anticipations. Finally, participants were more prone to explicitly indicate autobiographical memory as the main source of their simulations of undesirable episodes, whereas they equally related the simulations of desirable events to autobiographical events or semantic knowledge. These findings show that desirable and undesirable scenarios call for different mechanisms of scene construction. The present study emphasizes that future thinking cannot be considered as a monolithic entity.


Subject(s)
Imagination , Memory, Episodic , Motivation/physiology , Thinking/physiology , Adolescent , Anxiety/psychology , Female , Humans , Linear Models , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Photic Stimulation , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Time Factors , Young Adult
2.
Neuropsychologia ; 45(7): 1511-21, 2007 Apr 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17194465

ABSTRACT

The present study aimed at investigating age-related changes and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) related effects in simple arithmetic. To pursue this goal, MCI patients, healthy old adults and young adults performed three computerised tasks. The production (e.g., 3 x 4=?) and the verification task (3 x 4 12?) evaluated direct access to multiplication knowledge, the number-matching task (3 x 4 34?, 'do 3 x 4 and 34 have the same digits?') tested indirect access. In verification and number-matching, interference from related distractors (e.g., 3 x 4 followed by 16) relative to unrelated distractors (17) reflects access to stored fact representations as well as efficiency of inhibition processes. Results indicated that, compared to young adults, MCI and healthy old adults were slower in responding across tasks. In production and verification, analyses of individual latency regression slopes and intercepts suggested that these age effects were related to differences at peripheral processing stages (e.g., encoding) rather than at the central (arithmetic retrieval) stage. Differences between MCI and healthy elderly emerged only in the number-matching task. While in verification effects were comparable between groups, in number-matching MCI patients were more susceptible to interference from irrelevant information than healthy old participants. Overall, the present findings indicate that aging has a general effect on peripheral processing speed, but not on arithmetic memory retrieval. Parietal cortico-subcortical circuits mediating arithmetic fact retrieval (Dehaene, S., & Cohen, L. (1995). Towards an anatomical and functional model of number processing. Mathematical Cognition, 1, 83-120; Dehaene, S., & Cohen, L. (1997). Cerebral pathways for calculation: Double dissociation between rote verbal and quantitative knowledge of arithmetic. Cortex, 33, 219-250) thus seem to be preserved in normal aging and MCI. In contrast, MCI patients show enhanced interference in number-matching. This task-specific lack of inhibition may point to dysfunctional frontal cortico-subcortical networks in MCI.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Cognition Disorders/physiopathology , Knowledge , Problem Solving/physiology , Adult , Aged , Analysis of Variance , Female , Humans , Male , Mathematics , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Reaction Time/physiology , Statistics as Topic
3.
Psychol Aging ; 15(3): 542-50, 2000 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11014716

ABSTRACT

It has been recently suggested that the presence of identity negative priming effects in old adults could occur when there is substantial processing of the distracting information in a selective attention task (J. M. Kieley & A. A. Hartley, 1997). In three experiments, using a letter identification task, it was found that making target selection more difficult increased the magnitude of the negative priming effect to a similar extent in both young and old adults. Moreover, the size of the negative priming effect did not differ between young and elderly participants. These results are discussed with respect to the issue of age-related deficits in the mechanisms underlying negative priming.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Cognition Disorders/diagnosis , Problem Solving , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Humans , Middle Aged , Random Allocation , Reaction Time , Severity of Illness Index
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