Title: Decomposing adult age differences in working memory.
Abstract: Two studies, involving a total of 460 adults between 18 and 87 years of age, were conducted to determine which of several hypothesized processing components was most responsible for age-related declines in working memory functioning. Significant negative correlations between age and measures of working memory (i.e., from -.39 to -.52) were found in both studies, and these relations were substantially attenuated by partialing measures hypothesized to reflect storage capacity, processing efficiency, coordination effectiveness, and simple comparison speed. Because the greatest attenuation of the age relations occurred with measures of simple processing speed, it was suggested that many of the age differences in working memory may be mediated by age-related reductions in the speed of executing elementary operations. Working memory is generally defined as the preservation of information while simultaneously processing the same or other information. It is distinguished from other forms of memory because the assumption that it reflects both processing and storage implies that it plays an important role in many cognitive tasks (e.g., Baddeley, 1986; Carpenter & Just, 1989; Salthouse, 1990). An illustration of the hypothesized functioning of working memory in one cognitive task, mental arithmetic, is presented in Figure 1. The left column in this figure indicates the operations to be performed, and the right column represents the intermediate products that must be temporarily stored while carrying out those operations. This figure is useful because it graphically illustrates both the importance and the complexity of working memory. That is, it is clear from this example that effective storage of information is essential in order for the successful performance of certain cognitive tasks. Figure 1 also suggests that it may be fruitful to think of working memory not as a single discrete structure, but rather as a dynamic interchange among three conceptually distinct aspects or components-processing efficiency, storage capacity, and coordination effectiveness. Processing is represented by the series of operations in the left column, storage is represented by the entries in the right column, and coordination can be assumed to correspond both to the sequencing of operations and to the arrows portraying the exchange of information between processing and storage. A primary purpose of this article was to investigate the contribution of these three hypothesized components to age-related differences in measures of working memory. Each of the components has been hypothesized to be an important source of adult age differences by one or more researchers, but few definitive conclusions have been possible because the currently available evidence is both weak and inconsistent. To illustrate,
Publication Year: 1991
Publication Date: 1991-09-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 1295
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