Aging
Adults Have Choices When Confronting Perceived Mental Declines
By
Craig Chamberlain, News Bureau,
University
of
Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign
August
2, 2007
Aging
adults may joke about memory lapses and “early Alzheimer’s.” They
may worry when they can’t understand a drug plan or lose track of the
characters in a novel.
But they have more control over their “cognitive vitality” than they
may realize, says Elizabeth Stine-Morrow, a professor of educational
psychology at the
University
of
Illinois
, who has spent 20 years studying learning throughout the lifespan.
Aging adults have choices in the way they allocate effort in everyday
mental tasks like reading, Stine-Morrow said. They can compensate for
subtle age-related changes rather than either giving in to them or giving
up completely on the activity, she said. They also have choices in the way
they stay mentally engaged and embrace challenges throughout their
lifetimes and into older age.
It’s all part of what she has playfully named the “Dumbledore
hypothesis of cognitive aging,” based on a line from the headmaster
Dumbledore in the third Harry Potter novel: “It is our choices … that
show what we truly are, far more than our abilities.”
Certain “fluid abilities,” or “mental mechanics,” do tend to
decline with age, Stine-Morrow said, but it matters how we respond.
“Minor glitches in the cognitive system can loom larger than they
perhaps need to because we’ve got these preconceived ideas about what
happens with aging,” she said.
She will discuss her “Dumbledore hypothesis” on Aug. 19 at the
American Psychological Association conference in
San Francisco
, in a presidential address for the Adult Development and Aging division.
A paper on the subject has been accepted for publication in the journal
Current Directions in Psychological Science.
In her reading research, Stine-Morrow, also a professor in
Illinois
’ Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, has paid
particular attention to changes we make – or fail to make – in the way
we process and regulate our reading as we age.
More recently, she has initiated a program called Senior Odyssey, designed
to engage older adults in team-based creative problem-solving and other
brain-teasing challenges. After a pilot study, she is now at the start of
a five-year, $2.8 million grant from the National Institute on Aging to
develop the program and study its effectiveness.
Much of her reading research has involved measuring small split-second
differences in the way people move through text, and in how and where they
pause, noting how those differences affect what they gain or remember from
the text.
She has found that older adults who remember more of what they’ve read
tend to read differently from either younger readers or older readers who
remember less. They had learned, consciously or unconsciously, that “in
order to maintain the same level of comprehension and memory for text as
you get older, you have to do it differently,” she said.
One thing they do is to spend more time building a “situation model”
at the beginning of a story or book. They take time to get a feel for the
setting, to get to know the characters, and to get grounded in important
details of the story. By doing so, they find it easier to integrate new
information later on, Stine-Morrow said. “Page-turners are page-turners
later (in a book or story); they’re rarely page-turners early on.”
Older readers with good comprehension also spend more time at what
Stine-Morrow calls the “micro level” of their reading, pausing longer
and more often to integrate new concepts or to orient themselves to a
change of setting in the text.
“Younger adults who have a better memory (of what they’ve read) spend
more time doing that conceptual integration, or what we call
‘wrap-up,’ at the ends of sentences, whereas older adults tend to do
that more in the middle of sentences,” she said.
In both cases, older readers with good comprehension have learned how to
adjust their allocation of effort to compensate for losses in areas such
as working memory and language-processing speed. Current research, yet to
be published, is looking at how readers respond when they are coached on
using these strategies.
“Effort is a good thing; effort doesn’t mean you’re deficient,”
Stine-Morrow said. “It’s just the nature of cognition that it requires
effort. Every time you allocate effort, it increases your capacity to do
that thing in the future. And that becomes even more important as we get
older.”
Aging adults can find themselves “embedded in cultural expectations
about aging,” Stine-Morrow said. “They buy into cultural stereotypes
of diminished cognitive capacity.”
Drawing on another reference from Harry Potter, Stine-Morrow compares
those cultural expectations to the “sorting hat” that Harry dons to
select which house he will live in at the Hogwarts school. The hat tries
to convince him of one choice, but Harry insists on another.
In Stine-Morrow’s analogy, the “sorting hat of cultural
expectations” suggests to aging adults that their abilities are in
decline. If they listen, they may shy away from intellectual challenges,
and in the process possibly hasten a real decline.
“Fundamentally, it’s a choice,” she said. “We make the choice to
listen to those murmurings of the sorting hat, or not.”
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