Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, Vol 51, Issue 2 P81-P90, Copyright © 1996 by The Gerontological Society of America
Age differences in recall and predicting recall of action events and words
L McDonald-Miszczak, AM Hubley and DF Hultsch
Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada.
Age differences in recall and prediction of recall were examined with
different memory tasks. We asked 36 younger (19-28 yrs) and 36 older (60-81
yrs) women to provide both global and item-by-item predictions of their
recall, and then to recall either (a) Subject Performance Tasks (SPTs), (b)
verb-noun word-pairs memorized in list-like fashion (Word-Pairs), or (c)
nonsense verb-noun word-pairs (Nonsense-Pairs) over three experimental
trials. Based on previous research, we hypothesized that these tasks would
vary in relative difficulty and flexibility of encoding. The results
indicated that (a) age differences in global predictions (task specific
self-efficacy) and recall performance across trials were minimized with SPT
as compared with verbal materials, (b) global predictions were higher and
more accurate for SPT as compared to verbal materials, and (c) item-by-item
predictions were most accurate for materials encoded with the most
flexibility (Nonsense Pairs). The results suggest that SPTs may provide
some level of environmental support to reduce age differences in
performance and task-specific self-efficacy, but that memory monitoring may
depend on specific characteristics of the stimuli (i.e., flexibility of
encoding) rather than their verbal or nonverbal nature.