Age and familiarity effects on musical memory

Background. A common complaint in older adults is trouble with their memory, especially for new information. Current knowledge about normal aging and changes in memory identify a divide between memory tasks that are unaffected by aging and those that are. Among the unaffected are recognition tasks....

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Main Authors: Sauvé, Sarah Anne, Satkunarajah, Praveena, Cooke, Stephen, Demirkaplan, Ozgen, Follett, Alicia, Zendel, Benjamin
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Language:unknown
Published: Center for Open Science 2023
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/hr6ys
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spelling crcenteros:10.31219/osf.io/hr6ys 2023-11-12T04:21:23+01:00 Age and familiarity effects on musical memory Sauvé, Sarah Anne Satkunarajah, Praveena Cooke, Stephen Demirkaplan, Ozgen Follett, Alicia Zendel, Benjamin 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/hr6ys unknown Center for Open Science https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode posted-content 2023 crcenteros https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/hr6ys 2023-10-26T21:42:34Z Background. A common complaint in older adults is trouble with their memory, especially for new information. Current knowledge about normal aging and changes in memory identify a divide between memory tasks that are unaffected by aging and those that are. Among the unaffected are recognition tasks. These memory tasks rely on accessing well-known information, often include environmental support, and tend to be automatic. Negative age effects on memory are often observed at both encoding and during recall. Older adults often have difficulty with recall tasks, particularly those that require effortful self-initiated processing, episodic memory, and retention of information about contextual cues. Research in memory for music in healthy aging suggests a skill-invariance hypothesis: that age effects dominate when general-purpose cognitive mechanisms are needed to perform the musical task at hand, while experience effects dominate when music-specific knowledge is needed to perform the task (Halpern & Bartlett, 2002).Aims. The goals of this pair of studies were to investigate the effects of age and familiarity on musical memory in the context of real pieces of music, and to compare a live concert experimental setting with a lab-based experimental setting.Method. Participants’ task was to click a button (or press the spacebar) when they heard the target theme in three pieces of music. One was Mozart’s Eine Kleine Nachtmusik and the others were original pieces commissioned for this study, one tonal and one atonal. Participants heard the relevant theme three times before listening to a piece of music. The music was performed by the Newfoundland Symphony Orchestra; participants either attended the concert, or watched a recording of the concert in the lab. Participants also completed two short cognitive tests and filled out a questionnaire collecting demographic information and a hearing abilities self-assessment.Results. We find a significant effect of familiarity and setting but not of age or musical training on ... Other/Unknown Material Newfoundland COS Center for Open Science (via Crossref)
institution Open Polar
collection COS Center for Open Science (via Crossref)
op_collection_id crcenteros
language unknown
description Background. A common complaint in older adults is trouble with their memory, especially for new information. Current knowledge about normal aging and changes in memory identify a divide between memory tasks that are unaffected by aging and those that are. Among the unaffected are recognition tasks. These memory tasks rely on accessing well-known information, often include environmental support, and tend to be automatic. Negative age effects on memory are often observed at both encoding and during recall. Older adults often have difficulty with recall tasks, particularly those that require effortful self-initiated processing, episodic memory, and retention of information about contextual cues. Research in memory for music in healthy aging suggests a skill-invariance hypothesis: that age effects dominate when general-purpose cognitive mechanisms are needed to perform the musical task at hand, while experience effects dominate when music-specific knowledge is needed to perform the task (Halpern & Bartlett, 2002).Aims. The goals of this pair of studies were to investigate the effects of age and familiarity on musical memory in the context of real pieces of music, and to compare a live concert experimental setting with a lab-based experimental setting.Method. Participants’ task was to click a button (or press the spacebar) when they heard the target theme in three pieces of music. One was Mozart’s Eine Kleine Nachtmusik and the others were original pieces commissioned for this study, one tonal and one atonal. Participants heard the relevant theme three times before listening to a piece of music. The music was performed by the Newfoundland Symphony Orchestra; participants either attended the concert, or watched a recording of the concert in the lab. Participants also completed two short cognitive tests and filled out a questionnaire collecting demographic information and a hearing abilities self-assessment.Results. We find a significant effect of familiarity and setting but not of age or musical training on ...
format Other/Unknown Material
author Sauvé, Sarah Anne
Satkunarajah, Praveena
Cooke, Stephen
Demirkaplan, Ozgen
Follett, Alicia
Zendel, Benjamin
spellingShingle Sauvé, Sarah Anne
Satkunarajah, Praveena
Cooke, Stephen
Demirkaplan, Ozgen
Follett, Alicia
Zendel, Benjamin
Age and familiarity effects on musical memory
author_facet Sauvé, Sarah Anne
Satkunarajah, Praveena
Cooke, Stephen
Demirkaplan, Ozgen
Follett, Alicia
Zendel, Benjamin
author_sort Sauvé, Sarah Anne
title Age and familiarity effects on musical memory
title_short Age and familiarity effects on musical memory
title_full Age and familiarity effects on musical memory
title_fullStr Age and familiarity effects on musical memory
title_full_unstemmed Age and familiarity effects on musical memory
title_sort age and familiarity effects on musical memory
publisher Center for Open Science
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/hr6ys
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
op_doi https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/hr6ys
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