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Autoren Papenberg, Goran; Bäckman, Lars; Chicherio, Christian; Nagel, Irene E.; Heekeren, Hauke R.; Lindenberger, Ulman; Li, Shu-Chen  
Titel Higher intraindividual variability is associated with more forgetting and dedifferentiated memory functions in old age.  
URL http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002839321100145X  
URN, persistent 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2011.03.013  
Erscheinungsjahr 2011, Jg. 49, H. 7  
Seitenzahl S. 1879-1888  
Zeitschrift Neuropsychologia  
Dokumenttyp Zeitschriftenaufsatz; gedruckt; online  
Beigaben Literaturangaben, Abbildungen, Tabellen  
Sprache englisch  
Forschungsschwerpunkt Forschung zu Diagnostik und Intervention bei Entwicklungsstörungen schulischer Fertigkeiten  
Schlagwörter Bildungsforschung; Individuum; Veränderung; Vergessen; Erinnerung; Gedächtnis; Reaktionsvermögen; Älterer Mensch; Empirische Untersuchung; Deutschland  
Abstract Intraindividual trial-to-trial reaction time (RT) variability is commonly found to be higher in clinical populations or life periods that are associated with impaired cognition. In the present study, higher within-person trial-to-trial RT variability in a perceptual speed task is related to more forgetting and dedifferentiation of memory functions in older adults (aged 60–71 years). More specifically, our study showed that individuals in a high-variability group (n = 175) forgot more memory scenes over a 1-week retention interval than individuals in the low-variability group (n = 174). In contrast, slower RT speed was associated with poorer episodic memory in general, but unrelated to the amount of forgetting. Moreover, results from multiple group latent factor analyses showed that episodic memory and working memory functions were more highly correlated in the high-variability (r = .63) than in the low-variability (r = .25) group. Given that deficits in dopamine (DA) modulation may underlie increases in RT variability, the present findings are in line with (i) recent animal studies implicating DA in long-term episodic memory consolidation and (ii) neurocomputational work linking DA modulation of performance variability to dedifferentiation of cognitive functions in old age. (DIPF/Orig.)  
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