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Journal ArticleDOI

Beliefs about fact retrieval and inferential reasoning across the adult lifespan

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TLDR
Positive global beliefs about memory and aging may be present even when such global beliefs contradict item-specific judgments and personal beliefs about one's own cognition.
Abstract
This study deals with beliefs about question-answering processes involving “world knowledge” utilized by young, middle aged, and older adults. Questions intended to induce either fact retrieval or inferential reasoning were shown to younger (n = 37), middle aged (n = 37) and older (n = 37) adults in both a multiple choice and true/false format. Increasing age level was not related to decreased confidence in either fact retrieval or inferential reasoning. Global assessments about these question-answering processes involving “people in general” and self evaluations were taken from the same individuals. In contrast to personal confidence ratings, adults of all ages generally believed in declining fact retrieval abilities in old age. Inferential reasoning, however, often was believed to remain stable or even increase in ability level with increasing age. This was especially true in the assessments generated by older adults and in self evaluations. Thus, negative global beliefs about memory and aging ...

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Book ChapterDOI

Attitudes toward Aging and Their Effects on Behavior

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an understanding of the nature of attitudes about aging and the mechanisms through which they influence the behavior of older adults and provide evidence that implicit attitudes may be even more strongly negative than explicit ones.
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Subjective memory beliefs and cognitive performance in normal and mildly impaired older adults.

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Oh, Honey, I Already Forgot That : Strategic Control of Directed Forgetting in Older and Younger Adults*

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Subjective age, PTSD and physical health among war veterans.

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References
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Book

Aging and behavior

TL;DR: The authors found that the older problem solvers had a greater difficulty in storing, retaining, and utilizing information needed to solve problems when this information was more complicated from a logical point of view.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subjective Memory Assessment and Test Performance in Elderly Adults

TL;DR: As in previous studies, a story recall test was the strongest predictor of reported memory performance; and despite a universal belief among elderly adults that their memory had deteriorated with age, very few of them felt that they were at all handicapped by forgetfulness in everyday life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Old age stereotypes: reconciling contradictions.

TL;DR: This study tested the hypothesis that age stereotyping with specific targets would occur when targets were disabled, when information was minimal, when the context was commonplace, and when the measuring instruments were psychometrically sound.
Journal ArticleDOI

Age differences in processing relevant versus irrelevant stimuli in multiple-item recognition learning

TL;DR: This finding supports the hypothesis, derived from previous research on perceptual tasks, that elderly adults direct greater amounts of attention to irrelevant stimuli than do young adults, thus reducing the amount of processing available for the accompanying relevant stimuli.
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