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Chapter Twenty Four

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Knowledge Base. Long-term storehouse of information and ... Use of new techniques to access knowledge base. Regular exercise improves blood flow to brain ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter Twenty Four


1
Chapter Twenty Four
  • Late Adulthood
  • Cognitive Development

2
Changes in Information Processing
  • Schaies study found decline in
  • verbal meaning
  • spatial orientation
  • inductive reasoning
  • number ability
  • word fluency

3
  • Sensory Register
  • stores incoming sensory information for a split
    second after it is received, to be selectively
    processed
  • It takes longer for information to register
  • Can be compensated for
  • Sensory receptors (eyes, ears, etc.- not as acute
    as earlier in life)

4
  • Working Memory
  • processing component through which current,
    conscious mental activity occurs
  • Two interrelated functions
  • temporary information storage
  • process information

5
  • Older adults have smaller working memory capacity
    than younger adults
  • Helps to provide additional time to analyze
    information

6
  • Long Term Memory
  • Knowledge Base
  • Long-term storehouse of information and memories
  • Consists of two subcomponents
  • Implicit and Explicit Memory
  • Explicit memory ? involves words, data and
    concepts, etc. Is easy to retrieve
  • Implicit memory ? information that is an
    unconscious or automatic memory such as habits,
    emotional responses, sensations and routines

7
  • Other Aspects of Cognition
  • Control Processes
  • memory strategies, retrieval strategies and
    rule-of-thumb that aid problem solving
  • Older adults use simpler, less efficient control
    processes to remember new information
  • On other control processes than memory, older
    adults are more similar to younger adults

8
Reasons for Age-Related Changes
  • Neurophysiological or biological
  • Stereotyping
  • Self-perceptions of cognitive abilities
  • May end up handicapping themselves
  • Problems with Laboratory Research
  • Priming is not available
  • Do not reflect difference in context and
    motivation

9
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10
  • Changes in the Brain
  • Fewer neurons, slower reaction ? begins to slow
    in the late 50s
  • Too fast to comprehend ? speed is often related
    to intelligence
  • Thinking becomes slower and simpler
  • Brain Compensation
  • As some brain cells die, others take over the
    tasks, dendrites continue to grow
  • Stem cells of brain can create new neurons

11
Cognition in Daily Life
  • Memory Losses in Daily Life
  • disadvantages because of speed
  • priming
  • motivation is critical
  • Slowing Down the Slowdown
  • Use of new techniques to access knowledge base
  • Regular exercise improves blood flow to brain
  • Cognitive stimulation can cause dendrites to
    develop new connections

12
Dementia
  • ? severely impaired thinking, memory or
    problem-solving ability

13
  • Alzheimers Disease
  • Disorder characterized by proliferation of
    certain abnormalities in the cerebral cortex,
    called plaques and tangles that destroy normal
    brain functioning
  • No matter what the age, brain damage takes the
    same form, and the amount of plaques and tangles
    correlate not with age, but the degree of
    intellectual impairment before death

14
  • If it appears in middle age it runs its course in
    3-5 years
  • If it appears in late adulthood it will take 10
    years to run its course
  • It is partially genetic, allele of gene apoE4
  • 20 inherit this from one parent, and so have a
    50-50 chance of having it
  • Allele apoE2 is protective
  • Up to 10 of people have this

15
  • Stages of Alzheimers
  • Stage 1- general forgetfulness
  • Stage 2- more general confusion noticeable
    differences in concentration and short term
    memory, can be aimless or repetitive in
    conversation
  • Stage 3- memory loss becomes truly dangerous and
    people are no longer able to take care of their
    basic needs

16
  • Stage 4- need full-time care and cannot care for
    themselves or respond normally
  • Occasionally irrationally angry or paranoid
  • Stage 5- completely mute and die in this stage

17
  • Current Outlook
  • Difficult for the family to cope with-
    frustration
  • No cure, but scientists are learning how to
    postpone or slow the course of AD

18
  • Many Strokes
  • Multi-Infarct Dementia
  • responsible for 15 of dementia cases and in
    combination with Alzheimers accounts for another
    25
  • Temporary obstruction of blood vessels prevents a
    sufficient supply of blood to brain ? commonly
    called a stroke or ministroke
  • Common cause is arteriosclerosis
  • Progression is different ? immediate drop, then
    some improvement

19
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20
  • Subcortical Dementia
  • Parkinsons disease
  • related to degeneration of neurons in area of
    brain that produces dopamine, a neurotransmitter
    essential to normal brain functioning
  • Other Diseases
  • Toxins and infectious agents such as AIDS,
    syphilis

21
  • Reversible Dementia
  • Medication and Malnutrition
  • Alcohol
  • Psychological Illness
  • Depression

22
New Cognitive Development in Later Life
  • Life Review
  • Examination of life
  • Helps come to grips with aging and death
  • Aesthetic Sense

23
  • Wisdom
  • rich factual knowledge of human experience
  • practical and procedural knowledge about
    conditions of life
  • contextual approach to understanding life
    holistically
  • acceptance of uncertainty and unpredictability in
    life

24
  • recognition of individual differences,
    flexibility
  • Spiritual Values
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