Adult Age Differences in Event Memory for Events

File
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Date Issued
2016
EDTF Date Created
2016
Description
In order to remember an event, one must remember
the participants in the event, the actions that are
performed, and which people performed which actions.
Often people make binding errors in memory in
which they remember the people and the actions, but
they incorrectly remember one person as the person
who performed an action that was actually performed
by someone else. Half of the participants in our study
saw a series of actions with each action performed by
one of two actors. The other half of the participants
saw each action performed by a different actor. We
found that older adults were more likely to make binding
errors than were younger adults. Younger adults
were equally likely to make binding errors in the two
conditions. Older adults, however, made many fewer
binding errors when they saw only two actors during
encoding than when they saw many actors during encoding.
Language
Type
Genre
Extent
1 p.
Identifier
FA00005557
Date Backup
2016
Date Created Backup
2016
Date Text
2016
Date Created (EDTF)
2016
Date Issued (EDTF)
2016
Extension


FAU

IID
FA00005557
Organizations
Person Preferred Name

Beazley, Joanna
Physical Description

application/pdf
1 p.
Title Plain
Adult Age Differences in Event Memory for Events
Origin Information

2016
2016
Florida Atlantic University

Boca Raton, Florida

Physical Location
Florida Atlantic University Libraries
Place

Boca Raton, Florida
Sub Location
Digital Library
Title
Adult Age Differences in Event Memory for Events
Other Title Info

Adult Age Differences in Event Memory for Events