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The rise and fall of immediate and delayed memory for verbal and visuospatial information from late childhood to late adulthood

by: Jaap M. J. Murre, Steve M. J. Janssen, Romke Rouw, Martijn Meeter
Acta Psychologica, Vol. 142, No. 1. (January 2013), pp. 96-107, doi:10.1016/j.actpsy.2012.10.005  Key: citeulike:12109841

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Abstract

Over 100,000 verbal and visuospatial immediate and delayed memory tests were presented via the Internet to over 28,000 participants in the age range of 11 to 80. Structural equation modeling pointed to the verbal versus visuospatial dimension as an important factor in individual differences, but not the immediate versus delayed dimension. We found a linear decrease of 1% to 3% per year in overall memory performance past the age of 25. For visuospatial tests, this decrease started at age 18 and was twice as fast as the decrease of verbal memory. There were strong effects of education, with the highest educated group sometimes scoring one full standard deviation above the lowest educated group. Gender effects were small but as expected: women outperformed men on the verbal memory tasks; men outperformed women on the visuospatial tasks. We also found evidence of increasing proneness to false memory with age. Memory for recent news events did not show a decrease with age. ⺠Individuals differ strongly in verbal versus visuospatial memory performance. ⺠Individuals can be characterized as having a good verbal or visuospatial memory. ⺠Visuospatial memory performance shows a clear peak at the age of 16. ⺠After age 25, visuospatial memory decreases about twice as fast as verbal memory. ⺠There is an increasing proneness to report false memories with age.


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