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Journal Article

Citation

Devolder PA, Pressley M. Appl. Cogn. Psychol. 1992; 6(7): 629-642.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1992, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/acp.2350060706

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

A metacognitive hypothesis to explain age differences in adult memory is explored here-that younger and older adults differ in beliefs about memory and strategic processing. The motivational beliefs that adults make for their own memory performances were examined across tests of recall, recognition, face-name learning, and appointment-keeping. Forty-eight older and 48 younger community-living adults were required to report the factors they believed influenced their performance and the memory strategies used for each task. A final questionnaire required subjects to rank order the importance of a list of causal factors. There were significantly more younger adults as compared to older adults who attributed performance to controllable factors (i.e. strategy use), although age differences in beliefs on a more familiar memory task were smaller than on other tasks. Moreover, within age groups, attributions to controllable factors were associated with increased memory performance compared to when memory was attributed to uncontrollable factors (i.e. ability, age). Believing that memory is uncontrollable may undermine the efficient use of effort in cognition, consistent with current metacognitive theory.


Language: en

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