Lifetime of Knowledge Can Clutter Memories of Older Adults

Summary: Older people’s brains allocate more space to accumulated knowledge and have more material to navigate when trying to access memories, a new study reports.

Source: Cell Press

When a person tries to access a memory, their brain quickly sifts through everything stored in it to find the relevant information. But as we age, many of us have difficulty retrieving memories.

In a review published in the journal Trends in Cognitive Sciences on February 11, researchers propose an explanation for why this might be happening: the brains of older adults allocate more space to accumulated knowledge and have more material to navigate when attempting to access memories.

While this wealth of prior knowledge can make memory retrieval challenging, the researchers say it has its upsides—this life experience can aid with creativity and decision-making. 

Researchers Tarek Amer of Columbia University and Harvard University, Jordana Wynn of Harvard University, and Lynn Hasher of the University of Toronto looked at several behavioral and neuroimaging studies, which show that older adults have difficulty suppressing information that is no longer relevant and that when searching for a specific memory, they often retrieve other, irrelevant memories along with it.

The studies also showed that when given a cognitive task, older adults rely more heavily on previous knowledge than younger adults do.

While the researchers focus primarily on the difficulties that these cluttered memories may pose, they also highlight a few situations in which these crowded memoryscapes may be useful.

“Evidence suggests that older adults show preserved, and at times enhanced, creativity as a function of enriched memories,” the researchers write.

They further hypothesize that older adults may be well served by their prior knowledge when it comes to decision-making, where they can pull on their accumulated wisdom.

This shows an older man's face
While the researchers focus primarily on the difficulties that these cluttered memories may pose, they also highlight a few situations in which these crowded memoryscapes may be useful. Image is in the public domain

With continued study and increased understanding of how memory works in older adults, researchers are hopeful that they may be able to find new ways to help them. They write, “It is possible that the increased binding and richer encodings of older adults can even be leveraged to improve older adults’ learning and memory.”

Funding: This work was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

About this memory and aging research news

Author: Kelcie Walther
Source: Cell Press
Contact: Kelcie Walther – Cell Press
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: The findings will appear in Trends in Cognitive Sciences

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  1. “When a person tries to access a memory, their brain quickly sifts through everything stored in it to find the relevant information.”

    Really? Sounds like a brain fart to me. Why would the search continue examining stored items as retrieval candidates after the desideratum had been identified and retrieved? Such perseveration, a waste of resources serving no purpose, would clearly reduce fitness and so be eliminated by natural selection.

    “everything stored in it” is much like the coast of Britain as referenced in Mandelbrot’s “The Fractal Geometry of Nature”–a non-existent referent no less than “the present King of France.”
    It is a fractal rather than flat object so exhaustion is impossible–flattening it results in an infinite list to examine sequentially, a task that cannot be completed in a finite time, much less quickly.

  2. I think more research needs to be conducted to prove that “Lifetime of Knowledge Can Clutter Memories of Older Adults. Some young-adult have read and studied more materials than in an entire Older Adult’s lifetime, cluttered with knowledge in young adult memory may have problems retrieving recent information as well.

  3. Where do the older peoples’ brains “store” the memories? Unless I’m mistaken neuroscientists have yet to discover what memories are made of or where and how the brain stashes them away. As far as I’m aware, the idea that the brain “stores” memories at all remains one big materialist assumption, not an established fact.

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