Age-related changes in performance on a visual-closure task
- 1 August 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology
- Vol. 10 (4), 451-466
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01688638808408252
Abstract
A sample of 645 volunteer subjects, 50-79 years of age, took part for two consecutive years in a neuropsychological study of perception and memory. The sample was divided into three age groups (50-59, 60-69, and 70-79) in order to examine any age-related changes in performance. On a visual-closure task, similar to that of Gollin (1960), all age groups showed significant improvements in performance (savings) with repeated exposure to the drawings, both after a 15-min, and again after a 1-year, time interval. There were significant differences, however, between the different age groups on all aspects of the task, including number of errors made during initial perceptual performance, percentage of savings over both short- and long-time intervals, and number of items recalled. These findings are contrasted with those from studies of implicit and explicit aspects of verbal memory in normal young and old people, which have found no age-related differences in implicit memory abilities. Implications of these findings, as they relate to the neuropsychological assessment of memory in older people, are discussed briefly.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dissociation of memory and awareness in young and older adultsJournal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 1986
- The clinical aspects of memory disorders: Contributions from experimental studies of amnesia and dementiaJournal of Clinical Neuropsychology, 1984
- Preserved Learning and Retention of Pattern-Analyzing Skill in Amnesia: Dissociation of Knowing How and Knowing ThatScience, 1980
- Memory for verbal and spatial information as a function of ageExperimental Aging Research, 1980
- Accessing lexical memory: The transfer of word repetition effects across task and modalityMemory & Cognition, 1979
- Age and the perception of incomplete figuresExperimental Aging Research, 1978
- Frequency and repetition effects in lexical memory.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1977
- Neuronal loss, neurofibrillary tangles and granulovacuolar degeneration in the hippocampus with ageing and dementiaActa Neuropathologica, 1977
- Further analysis of the hippocampal amnesic syndrome: 14-year follow-up study of H.M.Neuropsychologia, 1968
- DEVELOPMENTAL STUDIES OF VISUAL RECOGNITION OF INCOMPLETE OBJECTSPublished by SAGE Publications ,1960