Author:
Zhivago KA,Shashidhara Sneha,Garani Ranjini,Purokayastha Simran,Rao Naren P.,Murthy Aditya,Arun SP
Abstract
ABSTRACTA decline in declarative or explicit memory has been extensively characterized in cognitive ageing and is a hallmark of cognitive impairments. However, whether and how implicit perceptual memory varies with ageing or cognitive impairment is unclear. Here, we compared implicit perceptual memory and explicit memory measures in three groups of subjects: (1) 59 healthy young volunteers (20-30 years); (2) 238 healthy old volunteers (50-90 years) and (3) 21 patients with mild cognitive impairment MCI (50-90 years). To measure explicit memory, subjects were tested on standard recognition and recall tasks. To measure implicit perceptual memory, we used a classic perceptual priming paradigm. Subjects had to report the shape of a visual search pop-out target. Implicit priming was measured as the speedup in response time for targets with the same vs different color/position on consecutive trials.Our main findings are as follows: (1) Explicit memory was weaker in old compared to young subjects, and in MCI compared to age-matched controls; (2) Surprisingly, implicit perceptual memory did not always decline with age: color priming was smaller in older subjects but position priming was larger; (3) Position priming was less frequent in the MCI group compared to age-matched controls; (4) Implicit and explicit memory measures were uncorrelated in all three groups. Thus, implicit memory can increase or decrease with age or cognitive impairment, but this decline does not covary with explicit memory. We propose that incorporating explicit and implicit measures can yield a richer characterization of memory.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory