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Saturday, August 30, 2008 - 9:58 AM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
Older adults often find that their memories betray them. A team of
Canadian psychologists, led by Michael Ross of the University of
Waterloo in Ontario, offers this advice to elderly individuals with
memory concerns: Don't go it alone. Talking about recent memories
with someone else, such as a spouse, works like a cognitive vacuum
cleaner, in Ross' view. It sucks up many mistakes that litter memory,
leaving behind a relatively clean core of accurately recalled
information. http://louis7j7sheehan.blogspot.com
"Collaboration could help to reduce the frequency of
older people's false recall in many everyday contexts," Ross says. Few
researchers have examined collaborative remembering (SN: 9/13/97, p.
174). Ross and his coworkers devised two memory tasks for 59
married couples, ages 68 to 78. The researchers randomly assigned 29
couples to collaborate on their choices and 30 to deliberate
individually. The first task involved list memory. Each couple
jointly circled 25 items for purchase in a 70-item grocery catalog.
About an hour later, participants were taken to a supermarket where
they attempted to remember items from their shopping lists and put them
into a cart. After returning home, volunteers again tried to recall
items on their shopping lists. On the second task, participants tried to name 14 highlighted but unlabeled landmarks on a map of their community. Individuals
correctly recalled about two or three more shopping items and landmarks
than couples did, the researchers report in the September Applied Cognitive Psychology. However, couples usually made four or five fewer memory errors on these tasks than individuals did. Collaborators
challenged each other's mistakes, Ross theorizes. Consistent with that
scenario, individuals working alone rarely picked the same wrong
grocery items or made the same landmark errors as their spouses did. Not
surprisingly, when working individually, people with either lots of
shopping experience or community familiarity remembered more material
on these respective tasks than their less-knowledgeable spouses did.
Yet the "experts" and "nonexperts" committed the same number of memory
errors, Ross says. Experts in each area drew on a rich store of
memories that generated both hits and misses, he proposes. So, even for
an expert, a collaborator can help weed out mistakes. Collaboration
represents a "manageable and realistic solution to a memory problem
that gets increasingly onerous as we age," remarks psychologist William
von Hippel of the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. http://louis7j7sheehan.blogspot.com
Fears
of forgetfulness contribute to memory errors by the elderly, von Hippel
suggests. In Ross' shopping study, for instance, such concerns might
have impelled individuals to grab any plausible or familiar item. Although
people commonly shop with a list, the new study applies to many memory
challenges faced by older people, comments psychologist D. Stephen
Lindsay of the University of Victoria in British Columbia. Consider
having to remember to stop by the pharmacy to pick up a prescription,
check your blood pressure while there, and then get cash at the bank
before getting a haircut. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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