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Memory
grows less efficient very early in
Alzheimer's Disease
Newswise — Even very early in Alzheimer's
disease, people become less efficient at
separating important from less important
information, a new study has found.
Knowing this, clinicians may be able to
train people in the early stages of
Alzheimer's to remember high-value
information better, according to a report in
the May issue of Neuropsychology, published
by the American Psychological Association.
Remembering what’s most important is central
to daily life.
For example, if you went to
the grocery store but left your shopping
list at home, you’d at least want to
remember the milk and bread, if not the jam.
Or, when packing for a trip, you’d want to
remember your wallet and tickets more than
your slippers or belt.
Participants in the study were recruited
from the Washington University in St. Louis
Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center.
They
included 109 healthy older adults (average
age of almost 75), 41 people with very mild
(very early) Alzheimer's disease (average
age of almost 76), 13 people with mild
(early) Alzheimer's (average age of almost
77), and 35 younger adults (all 25 or under,
average age of almost 20).
The researchers asked participants to study
and learn neutral words that were randomly
assigned different point values. When asked
to recall the items, participants were asked
to maximize the total value.
All
participants, even those with Alzheimer's,
recalled more high-value than low-value
items. However, the Alzheimer's groups were
significantly less efficient than their
healthy age peers at remembering items
according to their value.
It meant they no
longer maximized learning and memory, which
in healthy people are fairly efficient
processes.
The authors speculated that Alzheimer's
disease makes it harder for people to encode
what they learn in a strategic way.
Because
encoding is the first step in long-term
memory, this affects their ability to
remember things according to their value.
The findings also demonstrate that
value-directed learning stays intact in
healthy aging. Older adults might not
remember as much as younger adults, but when
healthy, they remain able to distinguish
what’s important.
This research suggests the potential for
improved memory training. People with
early-stage Alzheimer's might remember
important information better by learning to
be more strategic and selective when
encoding high-value information, even though
it comes at the expense of neglecting
less-important information, the authors
said.
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