Predicting episodic memory performance of very old men and women: Contributions from age, depression, activity, cognitive ability, and speed.
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Psychology and Aging
- Vol. 12 (2) , 340-351
- https://doi.org/10.1037//0882-7974.12.2.340
Abstract
Regression models were developed to explain age-related and total variance in memory and to determine the independent contribution from general processing speed, having taken into account cognitive and noncognitive individual differences. Episodic memory was assessed for 3 tasks in a population-based sample of 951 adults comprising 515 men and 436 women (aged 70-96, M = 77.6, SD = 5.5). Correlations between age and memory accounted for 6%-9% of the variance. Hierarchical multiple regressions showed a reduction in this age-related variance by up to 94%, after entering gender, depression, health, cognitive status, activities, and speed. General processing speed was the major mediator of age-related variance in memory. Although both the age-related variance and the speed-related variance in memory were significantly reduced by prior entry of other individual differences variables for all 3 tasks, speed remained a significant mediator of remembering, and negligible differences in the residual age-related variance were observed by inclusion of other background variables.Keywords
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