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J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci ; 76(4): 703-710, 2021 03 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33254224

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: In young adults, the ability to verbally recall instructions in working memory is enhanced if the sequences are physically enacted by the participant (self-enactment) or the experimenter (demonstration) during encoding. Here we examine the effects of self-enactment and demonstration at encoding on working memory performance in older and younger adults. METHOD: Fifty young (18-23 years) and 40 older (60-89 years) adults listened to sequences of novel action-object pairs before verbally recalling them in the correct order. There were three different encoding conditions: spoken only, spoken + demonstration, and spoken + self-enactment. We included two different levels of difficulty to investigate whether task complexity moderated the effect of encoding condition and whether this differed between age groups. RESULTS: Relative to the spoken only condition, demonstration significantly improved young and older adults' serial recall performance, but self-enactment only enhanced performance in the young adults, and this boost was smaller than the one gained through demonstration. DISCUSSION: Our findings suggest that additional spatial-motoric information is beneficial for older adults when the actions are demonstrated to them, but not when the individual must enact the instructions themselves.


Subject(s)
Memory, Short-Term , Serial Learning , Spatial Processing , Age Factors , Aged , Cues , Executive Function/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Recall/physiology , Reaction Time , Speech Perception , Visual Perception , Young Adult
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