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Journal Article

Citation

Herlitz A, Airaksinen E, Nordström E. Neuropsychology 1999; 13(4): 590-597.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, University of Stockholm, Stockholm Gerontology Research Center, and Karolinska Institute, Sweden. ahz@psychology.su.se

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10527068

Abstract

The impact of verbal and visuospatial ability on sex differences in episodic memory was investigated. One hundred men and 100 women, 2040 years old, participated in a series of verbal and visuospatial tasks. Episodic memory was assessed in tasks that, to a greater or lesser extent, were verbal or visuospatial in nature. Results showed that women excelled in verbal production tasks and that men performed at a superior level on a mental rotation task. In addition, women tended to perform at a higher level than men on most episodic memory tasks. Taken together, the results demonstrated that (a) women perform at a higher level than men on most verbal episodic memory tasks and on some episodic memory tasks with a visuospatial component, and (b) women's higher performance on episodic memory tasks cannot fully be explained by their superior performance on verbal production tasks.


Language: en

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