The Free Press Journal

Memory doesn’t worsen with age

-

Ageing memories may not be “worse,” just different, a new study suggests. While it may not always be the first sign of ageing, some faculties, including memory, do get worse as people age. But the process may not be as straightfo­rward as it seems. Zachariah Reagh, assistant professor of psychologi­cal and brain sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, looked at the brain activity of older people not by requiring them to recite a group of words or remember a string of numbers.

Instead, Reagh looked at a “naturalist­ic approach,” one that more closely resembled real-world activities. He found that brain activity in older adults isn’t necessaril­y quieter when it comes to memory. “It’s just different,” he says.

Common tests of memory involve a person’s ability to remember a string of words, count backward, or recognize repeated images. “How many times do you suspect a 75-year-old is going to have to remember, ‘tree, apple, cherry, truck?'” asked Reagh, first author on the paper with Angelique Delarazan, Alexander Garber, and Charan Ranganath, all of the University of California, Davis. Instead, he used a data set from the Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscien­ce (Cam-CAN) that included functional MRI (fMRI) scans of people watching an 8-minute movie. “There were no specific instructio­ns, or a ‘gotcha’ moment,” Reagh says. “They just got to kick back, relax, and enjoy the film.”

But while they may have been relaxing, the subjects’ brains were hard at work recognizin­g, interpreti­ng, and categorizi­ng events in the movies. One particular way people categorize events is by marking boundaries—where one event ends and another begins.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India