Memory Change in the Aged
Do memory abilities decline with aging? Are changes in memory universal or differential? Do they occur similarly or differently for all types of memory and to all aging persons? These are some of the principal questions explored in the Victoria Longitudinal Study and presented in this volume. Although there is a tremendous amount of research comparing the memory performance of younger and older adults, very few studies have followed the same older adults over time. Only through the use of such longitudinal methods can one directly observe changes in memory functioning with aging. This monograph reports longitudinal data following the same individuals over a six-year period. The authors consider a variety of theoretical and methodological issues related to memory and aging.
- One of the few longitudinal studies of memory and ageing
- Reports analyses of archival data
- Combines experimental and psychometric approaches
- Uses novel methods of data analysis
Product details
November 1998Hardback
9780521473613
356 pages
235 × 160 × 30 mm
0.65kg
Available
Table of Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Acknowledgements
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical issues and perspectives
- 3. Theory and research on memory and aging
- 4. Method of the Victoria Longitudinal Study
- 5. Measurement model and methodological analysis
- 6. Age, cohort, and period effects on cognition
- 7. Predicting age differences in memory
- 8. Cross-sectional models in the VLS
- 9. Predicting age changes in memory
- 10. Longitudinal models in the VLS
- 11. Conclusions
- Appendix
- References
- Author index
- Subject index.