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Evoking episodic and semantic details with instructional manipulation during autobiographical recall

Evoking episodic and semantic details with instructional manipulation during autobiographical recall
Evoking episodic and semantic details with instructional manipulation during autobiographical recall

Older adults tend to describe experiences from their past with fewer episodic details, such as spatiotemporal and contextually specific information, but more nonepisodic details, particularly personal semantic knowledge, than younger adults. While the reduction in episodic details is interpreted in the context of episodic memory decline typical of aging, interpreting the increased production of semantic details is not as straightforward. We modified the widely used Autobiographical Interview (AI) to create a Semantic Autobiographical Interview (SAI) that explicitly targets personal (P-SAI) and general semantic memories (G-SAI) with the aim of better understanding the production of semantic information in aging depending on instructional manipulation. Overall, older adults produced a lower proportion of target details than young adults. There was an intra-individual consistency in the production of target details in the AI and P-SAI, suggesting a trait level in the production of personal target details or consistency in the narrative style and communicative goals adopted across interviews. Older adults consistently produced autobiographical facts and self-knowledge across interviews, suggesting that they are biased toward the production of personal semantic information regardless of instructions. These results cannot be easily accommodated by accounts of aging and memory emphasizing reduced cognitive control or compensation for episodic memory impairment. Nevertheless, future work is needed to fully disentangle between these accounts. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

Humans, Memory, Episodic, Mental Recall/physiology, Female, Male, Aged, Semantics, Young Adult, Adult, Aging/physiology, Middle Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Adolescent
0882-7974
378-390
Melega, Greta
31dc256e-348d-4f1e-b8b6-f3e6d7c13538
Lancelotte, Fiona
3d752701-4a9a-42d2-9479-717b37c57f36
Johnen, Ann-Kathrin
7c0b287b-f730-4daa-ad6e-c38b1e5a8f4c
Hornberger, Michael
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
Levine, Brian
a572ba1f-d8ea-434e-ac3d-721aa92323ad
Renoult, Louis
45af9ed8-b999-4943-a92d-fdc4c6a25399
Melega, Greta
31dc256e-348d-4f1e-b8b6-f3e6d7c13538
Lancelotte, Fiona
3d752701-4a9a-42d2-9479-717b37c57f36
Johnen, Ann-Kathrin
7c0b287b-f730-4daa-ad6e-c38b1e5a8f4c
Hornberger, Michael
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
Levine, Brian
a572ba1f-d8ea-434e-ac3d-721aa92323ad
Renoult, Louis
45af9ed8-b999-4943-a92d-fdc4c6a25399

Melega, Greta, Lancelotte, Fiona, Johnen, Ann-Kathrin, Hornberger, Michael, Levine, Brian and Renoult, Louis (2024) Evoking episodic and semantic details with instructional manipulation during autobiographical recall. Psychology and Aging, 39 (4), 378-390. (doi:10.1037/pag0000821).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Older adults tend to describe experiences from their past with fewer episodic details, such as spatiotemporal and contextually specific information, but more nonepisodic details, particularly personal semantic knowledge, than younger adults. While the reduction in episodic details is interpreted in the context of episodic memory decline typical of aging, interpreting the increased production of semantic details is not as straightforward. We modified the widely used Autobiographical Interview (AI) to create a Semantic Autobiographical Interview (SAI) that explicitly targets personal (P-SAI) and general semantic memories (G-SAI) with the aim of better understanding the production of semantic information in aging depending on instructional manipulation. Overall, older adults produced a lower proportion of target details than young adults. There was an intra-individual consistency in the production of target details in the AI and P-SAI, suggesting a trait level in the production of personal target details or consistency in the narrative style and communicative goals adopted across interviews. Older adults consistently produced autobiographical facts and self-knowledge across interviews, suggesting that they are biased toward the production of personal semantic information regardless of instructions. These results cannot be easily accommodated by accounts of aging and memory emphasizing reduced cognitive control or compensation for episodic memory impairment. Nevertheless, future work is needed to fully disentangle between these accounts. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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More information

Published date: 1 June 2024
Keywords: Humans, Memory, Episodic, Mental Recall/physiology, Female, Male, Aged, Semantics, Young Adult, Adult, Aging/physiology, Middle Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Adolescent

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505186
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505186
ISSN: 0882-7974
PURE UUID: 6204ccfd-6696-418b-b037-8ebc53512842
ORCID for Michael Hornberger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2214-3788

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Date deposited: 01 Oct 2025 16:42
Last modified: 02 Oct 2025 02:19

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Contributors

Author: Greta Melega
Author: Fiona Lancelotte
Author: Ann-Kathrin Johnen
Author: Michael Hornberger ORCID iD
Author: Brian Levine
Author: Louis Renoult

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