Content area

Abstract

Cross-sectional and longitudinal studies have gotten different results as to whether processing speed can explain the aging of cognitive functions. Experimental analyses are needed to develop further evidence. To explore the relationship between speed and working memory in cognitive aging, processing speed intervention is conducted in the present study. Utilizing paper–pencil training, computer training, and a control group, 78 adults aged 58–83 years from Beijing participated in a speed intervention study. After 5 weeks of training, there were substantial training gains on two speed tests in two training groups, but no transfer effect on working memory was found. Discussion: The results fail to support the view that processing speed is a foundation of working memory for aging. The aging of working memory may depend more on an executive attention component.

Details

Title
The Impact of Processing Speed Training on Working Memory in Old Adults
Author
Peng, Huamao 1 ; Wen, Jing 1 ; Wang, Dahua 1 ; Gao, Yue 1 

 Institute of Developmental Psychology, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China 
Pages
150-157
Publication year
2012
Publication date
Sep 2012
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
10680667
e-ISSN
15733440
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2259772306
Copyright
Journal of Adult Development is a copyright of Springer, (2012). All Rights Reserved.