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Título
Working memory training improves episodic memory in older people: transfer based on controlled retrieval processes
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Older adults
Cognitive training
Episodic memory
Working memory
Recollection
Fecha de publicación
2024
Editor
Frontiers Media
Citación
Zamarreño P, Mateos PM and Valentín A (2024) Working memory training improves episodic memory in older people: transfer based on controlled retrieval processes. Front. Psychol. 15:1314483. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1314483
Resumen
[EN]Introduction: The results of working memory (WM) training to improve
episodic memory in older people are inconsistent. This inconsistency could
be due to the fact that the episodic memory tests used do not share the same
cognitive resources as the trained WM task. The aim of this study was to assess
whether performance on an episodic memory test will improve only when this
test requires controlled processes of retrieval of information from secondary
memory or recollection, similar to the processes exercised during WM training.
Method: Fifty-five people over 60 years of age participated in the study: 27 were
randomly assigned to the experimental group (EG) and the rest to the control
group (CG). The EG was trained in complex span tasks. Before and after training,
both groups were tested on episodic memory tests (a verbal and a visuospatial
recognition test) and WM span tasks (reading, digit and spatial location).
Results: ANOVAs revealed a greater improvement of recollection estimates in
the EG than in the CG for both verbal recognition (p = 0.023) and visuospatial
recognition (p = 0.014).
Discussion: Our results provide support for a cognitive mechanism whose
shared presence favored transfer from training on a WM task to a test of
episodic memory. Consistent with our predictions, training on complex span
tasks improved performance on recognition tests only when recall required a
controlled search process in secondary memory, or recollection. We therefore
stress the importance of identifying other cognitive resources that are susceptible
to transfer from a training task to other untrained tasks. A better understanding
of the phenomenon of transfer is crucial for the design of increasingly effective
intervention programs for older people.
URI
DOI
10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1314483
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