fr
Master
Anglais

Prospective Memory in Young and Older Adults: the Effect of Task Switching on the Two-Process Model of Strategic Monitoring

Contributeurs/tricesCauvin, Stéphanie
Directeurs/tricesKliegel, Matthias
Dénomination du masterMaîtrise universitaire en psychologie
Date de soutenance2015
Résumé

Remembering to execute intended actions in the future upon encountering specific target events is referred to as event-based prospective memory. In this research, we examined how individuals manage competing goals and execute delayed intentions and how this cognitive ability evolves along adulthood. Our theoretical groundwork was based on task switching and two processes, retrieval mode and target checking, underlying strategic monitoring of PM retrieval. We compared young (ages 19-24) and old (ages 59-79) adults (N = 40) on pure and mixed blocks of trials where they decided if a digit was bigger or smaller than five or odd or even. Target cues were letters that appeared on each side of the number. Results of PM performance were unexpected, showing no age difference. Entering retrieval mode and having high PM performance come at a cost for the ongoing task, especially for old adults, demonstrating that it is more difficult for adults to manage multiple goals and intentions...

eng
Groupe de recherche
Citation (format ISO)
CAUVIN, Stéphanie. Prospective Memory in Young and Older Adults: the Effect of Task Switching on the Two-Process Model of Strategic Monitoring. 2015.
Fichiers principaux (1)
Master thesis
accessLevelPrivate
Identifiants
  • PID : unige:75798
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Informations techniques

Création01/10/2015 10:36:00
Première validation01/10/2015 10:36:00
Heure de mise à jour14/03/2023 23:40:23
Changement de statut14/03/2023 23:40:23
Dernière indexation29/01/2024 20:34:07
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