Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN MEMORY FUNCTION Richard N. Jones, John N. Morris, Adrienne Rosenberg, Paul Malloy HRCA Research and Training Institute, Boston.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN MEMORY FUNCTION Richard N. Jones, John N. Morris, Adrienne Rosenberg, Paul Malloy HRCA Research and Training Institute, Boston."— Presentation transcript:

1 INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN MEMORY FUNCTION Richard N. Jones, John N. Morris, Adrienne Rosenberg, Paul Malloy HRCA Research and Training Institute, Boston Ken Kleinman Harvard Medical School, Boston MA Jason Allaire Wayne State University, Institute of Gerontology, Detroit MI Michael Marsiske University of Florida, Institute on Aging, Gainesville

2 ACTIVE Advanced Cognitive Training for Vital and Independent Elderly funded as a cooperative agreement with the National Institute on Aging and the National Institute of Nursing Research. Participating Institutions & Principal Investigators: Hebrew Rehabilitation Center for AgedJohn Morris, Ph.D. Indiana University David Smith, M.D. Johns Hopkins University George Rebok, Ph.D. Pennsylvania State UniversitySherry Willis, Ph.D. University of Alabama at BirminghamKarolin Ball, Ph.D. Wayne State University Michael Marsiske, Ph.D. Coordinating Center New England Research InstitutesSharon Tennstedt, Ph.D.

3 Objectives Characterize performance on memory task in cognitively normal older adults Use Latent Growth Curve Modeling (LGM) techniques Separately model initial recall and learning Explore association of background variables and recall, learning

4 Rey AVLT Auditory Verbal Learning Test (Lezak, 1983; Rey, 1964) 15 unrelated word list, read at 2 sec. intervals Participants asked to recall words List re-read four times Repeated recall trials Intrusion list Delayed Recall and Recognition task

5 Latent Growth Modeling Psychometric approach to repeated measures data Individual differences in intercept and slope over time captured in latent variables (initial recall, learning) Certain parameterizations equivalent to random coefficient models, mixed models, hierarchical linear models

6 Methods: Participants HRCA –elder housing IU –community centers UAB –drivers licenses, ID cards –eye clinic attendees WSU –community organizations –urban residential settings JHU –in and around urban geriatric center –urban senior high-rise housing –suburban retirement community –urban & rural medical centers PSU –PACE enrollees

7 Eligibility and Exclusion Criteria Eligibility Criteria –age  65 –living in non-institutional setting –available for duration of trial Exclusion Criteria –vision impairment –hearing loss –impaired communication –reported disability –Alzheimer’s dx or MMSE<23 –cancer dx w/ limited life expectancy –current chemo/radiation –CVA in previous 12 months –in other cognitive training –high level depressive sx (CESD>16)

8 Background Variables Demographics –Age –Sex –Ethnicity –Education Cognitive Functioning –General (MMSE) –Reasoning ability (STAMAT) –Vocabulary (Kit) –Digit symbol substitution (WAIS)

9

10

11 LGM Parameterization without Background Variables

12 Alternative Functional Forms of AVLT Growth

13 Logarithmic Growth Function

14

15 Model implied trajectories

16 LGM Parameterization with Background Variables

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28 Conclusion LGM provides a comprehensible model of initial recall and learning performance on the AVLT task Alternative summary measures are suggested by considering effect of background variables on initial recall and rate learning

29

30 LGM Alternative Parameterization without Background Variables

31 Word List Used in ACTIVE Drum Curtain Bell Coffee School Parent Moon Garden Hat Farmer Nose Turkey Color House River


Download ppt "INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN MEMORY FUNCTION Richard N. Jones, John N. Morris, Adrienne Rosenberg, Paul Malloy HRCA Research and Training Institute, Boston."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google