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Regular articles

Adult age differences in memory for distinctive information: Evidence from the bizarreness effect

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Pages 1983-1990 | Received 01 Jul 2008, Published online: 09 Sep 2009
 

Abstract

Two experiments examined age-related differences in memory for bizarre and common pictures. In Experiment 1, a facilitative effect of bizarreness was obtained for young adults and one of the older groups, but not for the oldest group (over age 70). However, the bizarreness effect was found for even the oldest group when predominantly common lists were used in Experiment 2. It is concluded that older adults suffer from deficits in distinctive processing, but those deficits can be reduced by providing a more uniformly common context in which differences can be processed.

Notes

1 The analysis was suggested by a reviewer.

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