Abstract
In the present study, we examined whether age modulates the processing of lexical and perceptual information in auditory implicit and explicit memory tests. Young and older adults performed a surface encoding task on spoken and printed words and then either identified degraded words or made explicit recognition judgments. The implicit test of perceptual identification yielded no evidence of age-related declines in the processing of either lexical information or coarse perceptual details (modality of presentation). The same test, however, produced marked age-related declines in the processing of fine-grained perceptual details (voice) when subjects were not familiarized with the talkers’ voices prior to the encoding task. Marked age differences were also observed in recognition memory. These findings suggest that although aging preserves the encoding and incidental retrieval of lexical and coarse perceptual information, it affects the encoding of fine-grained perceptual information and deliberate retrieval processes.
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This research was supported by Grant F32 DC00342 from NICDS.
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Pilotti, M., Beyer, T. Perceptual and lexical components of auditory repetition priming in young and older adults. Mem Cogn 30, 226–236 (2002). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03195283
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03195283