Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
927616 Consciousness and Cognition 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Benefits and costs on prospective memory performance, of enactment at encoding and a semantic association between a cue-action word pair, were investigated in two experiments. Findings revealed superior performance for both younger and older adults following enactment, in contrast to verbal encoding, and when cue-action semantic relatedness was high. Although younger adults outperformed older adults, age did not moderate benefits of cue-action relatedness or enactment. Findings from a second experiment revealed that the inclusion of an instruction to perform a prospective memory task led to increments in response latency to items from the ongoing activity in which that task was embedded, relative to latencies when the ongoing task only was performed. However, this task interference ‘cost’ did not differ as a function of either cue-action relatedness or enactment. We argue that the high number of cue-action pairs employed here influenced meta-cognitive consciousness, hence determining attention allocation, in all experimental conditions.

► Better performance following enactment and high cue-action semantic association. ► Although younger adults outperformed older ones, age did not moderate such benefits. ► Both age groups benefited significantly from cue-action relatedness and enactment. ► Performing a PM task led to an increase in response latency on ongoing activity.

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