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Old and very old adults as witnesses: event memory and metamemory

Author

  • Mats Dahl
  • Carl Martin Allwood
  • Benjamin Scimone
  • Mikael Rennemark

Summary, in English

Older people constitute an important category of eyewitnesses. Episodic memory performance in older persons is poorer than in younger adults, but little research has been made on older persons' metacognitive judgments. Since more persons of advanced age will likely be called upon as witnesses in coming years, it is critical to characterize this population's metacognitive abilities. We compared event memory metacognition in old adults (66-year-old, n = 74) to very old adults (87 or 90 years old, n = 55). Participants were tested on their memory of a film, using questions with two answer alternatives and the confidence in their answer. As expected, the very old group had a lower accuracy rate than the old group (d = 0.59). The very old group, however, monitored this impairment, since their over-/underconfidence and calibration did not differ from the old group but they displayed a poorer ability to separate correct from incorrect answers (discrimination ability). Possibly, the very old group was able to monitor the level of their over-/underconfidence because they applied general self-knowledge about their memory skills. In contrast, the discrimination of correct from incorrect answers may be more dependent on ability to attend to the features of each retrieved memory.

Publishing year

2015

Language

English

Pages

764-775

Publication/Series

Psychology, Crime and Law

Volume

21

Issue

8

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Topic

  • Applied Psychology

Keywords

  • advanced age
  • metamemory
  • eyewitness memory
  • metacognition
  • confidence
  • realism

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1477-2744