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Kathleen Stassen Berger Prepared by Madeleine Lacefield Tattoon, M.A. 1 Part VIII Late Adulthood: Cognitive Development Chapter Twenty-Four The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65 The impaired Dementia The Optimal: New Cognitive Development

Psych 41 (Chapter 24)Pdf

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Page 1: Psych 41 (Chapter 24)Pdf

Kathleen Stassen Berger

Prepared by Madeleine Lacefield

Tattoon, M.A.

1

Part VIII

Late Adulthood: Cognitive Development

Chapter Twenty-Four

The Usual: Information Processing

After Age 65

The impaired Dementia

The Optimal: New Cognitive

Development

Page 2: Psych 41 (Chapter 24)Pdf

2

Late Adulthood: Cognitive Development

―By the end of adulthood, physical

impairment, reduced perception,

decreased energy, and slower reactions

take an increasing toll.‖

Late-adulthood cognition is too complex to

be captured in a brief social conversation.

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• information-processing approach

– breaking down cognition into the steps of

• input (sensing)

• storage (memory)

• program (control process)

• output

• ―a perspective that compares human thinking

processes, by analogy, to computer analysis of

data, including sensory input, connections, stored

memories, and output‖ (Chapter 6)

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Sensing and Perceiving

– stimuli becomes information, perceived

by the mind, which must cross the

sensory threshold

• the person must be able to sense them,

decline begins with age

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Attention Deficits

– sensory-input problems—people miss information without realizing it

– cognition depends on perception, and perception depends on sensation

– one way to predict an older person’s intellect may be to measure vision, hearing, or smell

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Interference

– is thought to be a major impediment to

effective and efficient cognition in the

elderly

– reduced sensory input affects cognition

by increasing the effects of interference

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Memory

– storage refers to memory in the

information-processing model of

cognition

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

– Working memory

• is the capacity to keep information in mind for a

few seconds while processing it, evaluating,

calculating, inferring, and so on—working

memory functions as both a repository and a

processor

• dual-task deficit

– a situation in which a person’s performance of one

task is impeded by interference from the simultaneous

performance of another task

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Long-Term Memory

– the knowledge base stored in memory

• the component of the information processing system in which virtually limitless amounts of information can be stored indefinitely

• knowledge base– a body of knowledge in a particular area that

makes it easier to master new information in that area

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Selective Memory

– in areas not related to expertise,

selective deficits in long-term memory

appear

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Control Processes

– that part of the information-processing

system that regulates the analysis and

flow of information—memory and

retrieval strategies, selective attention,

and rules or strategies for problem

solving are all useful control processes

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Analysis

– an aspect of impaired analysis is that

the elderly are more likely to stick to

preconceived ideas rather than consider

and change their minds

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Retrieval

– another control process, the ability to

recall the name of childhood

acquaintance, worsens with age

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Reminding People of What They Know

– priming• preparation that makes it easier to perform some action—

it is easier to retrieve an item from memory if we are given a clue about it beforehand

– explicit memory• memory that is easy to retrieve on demand (as in a

specific test), usually with words

• most explicit memory involves consciously learned words, data, and concepts

– implicit memory• unconscious or automatic memory that is usually stored

via habits, emotional responses, routine procedures, and various sensations

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Brain Slowdown

– the elderly react more slowly than young adults

• reduced production of neurotransmitters—

glutamate, acetylcholine, serotonin and

dopamine—that allow a nerve impulse to jump

across the synapse from one neuron to another

– speed is crucial for many aspects of cognition,

especially working memory, since information

stays in working memory for only a short time

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Staying Healthy and Alert

– secondary aging—illness and conditions— that affect one person but not another

• secondary aging is a major reason for the remarkable variation in intellectual ability between one older person and another

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Ageism

– cognitive decline is rooted not in the

older person’s body and brain but in the

surrounding social context—cultural

attitudes can lead directly to age

differences in cognition

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Stereotype Threat

– does most harm when individuals internalize other people’s prejudices and react with helplessness

• if the elderly fear losing their minds because they have internalized the idea that old age always bring dementia, that fear may become a stereotype threat, undermining normal thinking

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Ageism Among Scientist

– scientists measure age differences in

memory in the same way they studied

memory in general—in laboratories

– these factors work against older adults,

who tend to perform best in familiar

settings

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The Usual: Information Processing After Age 65

• Beyond Ageism

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The Impaired: Dementia• Loss of intellectual ability in elderly people

has traditionally been called senility.

• the pathological loss of brain function is known as dementia—literally, ―out of mind,‖ referring to severely impaired judgment– dementia

• irreversible loss of intellectual functioning caused by organic brain damage or disease—dementia becomes more common with age, but it is abnormal and pathological even in the very old

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The Impaired: Dementia

• Alzheimer’s Disease (AD)

– the most common cause of dementia,

characterized by gradual deterioration of

memory and personality and marked by

the information of plaques of beta-

amyloid protein and tangles in the brain

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The Impaired: Dementia

• Risk Factors for Alzheimer’s Disease

– gender, ethnicity, and especially age affect a person’s odds of developing Alzheimer’s disease

– women are at greater risk than men

– fewer East Asians than Europeans develop the disorder

– less common among those of African descent, but life expectancy is far lower in Africa than in any other continent and diagnosis of illness in late adulthood is less certain

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The Impaired: Dementia

• Stages: From Confusion to Death

– Alzheimer’s disease usually runs

through a progressive course of five

identifiable stages, beginning with

forgetfulness and ending in death

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The Impaired: Dementia

• Stages: From Confusion to Death

– stage 1 – confused with normal aging

– stage 2 – generalized confusion—deficits in

concentration and short-term memory

– stage 3 – memory loss becomes dangerous

– stage 4 – full-time care

– stage 5 – unresponsive, no longer talking

stages take 10 to 15 years

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The Impaired: Dementia

• Many Strokes

– the second most common cause of dementia

is a stroke

– repeated brain damage leads to:

• vascular dementia (VaD), also called multi-

infarct dementia (MID)

– a form of dementia characterized by sporadic, and

progressive, loss of intellectual functioning caused by

repeated infarcts, or temporary obstructions of blood

vessels, which prevent sufficient blood from reaching

the brain

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The Impaired: Dementia

• Subcotical Dementias– forms of dementia that begin with impairments in

motor ability (which is governed by the subcortex) and produce cognitive impairment in later stages—Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease, and multiple sclerosis are subcortical dementias

– Parkinson’s Disease• a chronic, progressive disease that is

characterized by muscle tremor and rigidity, and sometimes dementia, caused by a reduction of dopamine production in the brain

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The Impaired: Dementia

• Reversible Dementia

– dementia caused by medication,

inadequate nutrition, alcohol abuse,

depression, or other mental illness can

sometimes be reversed

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The Impaired: Dementia

• Overmedication and Undernourishment

– without considering interaction, many

drugs commonly taken by the elderly slow

down mental processes

– inadequate nutrition is connected to

overmedication, many medications reduce

absorption of vitamins

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The Impaired: Dementia

• Psychological Illness

– elderly people have a lower incidence of

psychological disorders—the rate of

anxiety, antisocial personality disorder,

bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and

depression are lower after age 65

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The Impaired: Dementia

• Prevention and Treatment

– there is no cure or prevention for dementia

– many lifestyle factors that slow down

senescence also delay the onset of

dementia

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The Optimal: New Cognitive Development

• older people are more interested than young in the arts, in children, and in human experiences

• the elderly are ―social witnesses‖ to life

• aware of interdependent of the generations

• there are gains and losses at every stage of life

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The Optimal: New Cognitive Development

• Aesthetic Sense and Creativity

– elderly people seem to gain a greater

appreciation of nature and aesthetic

experience

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The Optimal: New Cognitive Development

• The Life Review

– an examination of one’s own part in life,

engaged in by many elderly people

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The Optimal: New Cognitive Development

• Wisdom

– a cognitive perspective characterized by

a broad, practical, comprehensive

approach to life’s problems, reflecting

timeless truths rather than immediate

expediency—seems to be more

common in the elderly than in the young