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      Effects of increased processing demands on age differences in working memory.

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      Psychology and Aging
      American Psychological Association (APA)

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          Abstract

          Three studies investigated (a) the plausibility of the claim that increasing the processing demands in a memory task contributes to greater involvement of a central processor and (b) the effects of altering reliance on the central processor on the magnitude of age-related differences in working-memory tasks. In the first study, young adults performed versions of 2 tasks presumed to vary in the degree of reliance on the central processor. In the second and third studies, young and older adults performed versions of a computation-span task that were assumed to vary along a rough continuum of the amount of required processing. The results indicated that although a central processor appears to be involved when working-memory tasks require simultaneous storage and processing of information, age-related differences in working memory seem to be determined at least as much by differences in the capacity of storage as by differences in the efficiency of processing.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Psychology and Aging
          Psychology and Aging
          American Psychological Association (APA)
          1939-1498
          0882-7974
          1990
          1990
          : 5
          : 3
          : 421-428
          Article
          10.1037/0882-7974.5.3.421
          2242246
          4b830395-18aa-477f-95e8-6df453d8746a
          © 1990
          History

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