Memory Consolidation in Aging and MCI After 1 Week

Walsh, Christine M.; Wilkins, Sarah; Bettcher, Brianne Magouirk; Miller, Bruce L.; Kramer, Joel H.

Abstract

Objective: To assess consolidation in amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI), controlling for differences in initial learning and using a protracted delay period for recall. Method: 15 individuals with aMCI were compared with 15 healthy older adult controls on a story learning task. Subjects were trained to criteria to equalize initial learning across subjects. Recall was tested at both the 30-min typically used delay and a 1-week delay used to target consolidation. Results: Using repeated measures ANOVAs adjusted for age, we found group x time point interactions across the entire task between the final trial and 30-min delay, and again between the 30-min and 1-week delay periods, with aMCI having greater declines in recall as compared with controls. Significant group main effects were also found, with aMCI recalling less than controls. Conclusion: Consolidation was impaired in aMCI as compared with controls. Our findings indicate that aMCI-related performance typically measured at 30 min underestimates aMCI-associated memory deficits. This is the first study to isolate consolidation by controlling for initial learning differences and using a protracted delay period to target consolidation in an aMCI sample.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000332342100012 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
Volumen: 28
Número: 2
Editorial: AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Página de inicio: 273
Página final: 280
DOI:

10.1037/neu0000013

Notas: ISI