Gender-Specific Differences in the Relationship between Autobiographical Memory and Intertemporal Choice in Older Adults.

As the population of older adults grows, their economic choices will have increasing impact on society. Research on the effects of aging on intertemporal decisions shows inconsistent, often opposing results, indicating that yet unexplored factors might play an essential role in guiding one's ch...

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Main Authors: Maayke Seinstra, Katharina Grzymek, Tobias Kalenscher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4559386?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-33c76369eaea4a8ea658ead636b1f22e2020-11-25T01:46:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01109e013706110.1371/journal.pone.0137061Gender-Specific Differences in the Relationship between Autobiographical Memory and Intertemporal Choice in Older Adults.Maayke SeinstraKatharina GrzymekTobias KalenscherAs the population of older adults grows, their economic choices will have increasing impact on society. Research on the effects of aging on intertemporal decisions shows inconsistent, often opposing results, indicating that yet unexplored factors might play an essential role in guiding one's choices. Recent studies suggest that episodic future thinking, which is based on the same neural network involved in episodic memory functions, leads to reductions in discounting of future rewards. As episodic memory functioning declines with normal aging, but to greatly variable degrees, individual differences in delay discounting might be due to individual differences in the vitality of this memory system in older adults. We investigated this hypothesis, using a sample of healthy older adults who completed an intertemporal choice task as well as two episodic memory tasks. We found no clear evidence for a relationship between episodic memory performance and delay discounting in older adults. However, when additionally considering gender differences, we found an interaction effect of gender and autobiographical memory on delay discounting: while men with higher memory scores showed less delay discounting, women with higher memory scores tended to discount the future more. We speculate that this gender effect might stem from the gender-specific use of different modal representation formats (i.e. temporal or visual) during assessment of intertemporal choice options.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4559386?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maayke Seinstra
Katharina Grzymek
Tobias Kalenscher
spellingShingle Maayke Seinstra
Katharina Grzymek
Tobias Kalenscher
Gender-Specific Differences in the Relationship between Autobiographical Memory and Intertemporal Choice in Older Adults.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Maayke Seinstra
Katharina Grzymek
Tobias Kalenscher
author_sort Maayke Seinstra
title Gender-Specific Differences in the Relationship between Autobiographical Memory and Intertemporal Choice in Older Adults.
title_short Gender-Specific Differences in the Relationship between Autobiographical Memory and Intertemporal Choice in Older Adults.
title_full Gender-Specific Differences in the Relationship between Autobiographical Memory and Intertemporal Choice in Older Adults.
title_fullStr Gender-Specific Differences in the Relationship between Autobiographical Memory and Intertemporal Choice in Older Adults.
title_full_unstemmed Gender-Specific Differences in the Relationship between Autobiographical Memory and Intertemporal Choice in Older Adults.
title_sort gender-specific differences in the relationship between autobiographical memory and intertemporal choice in older adults.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description As the population of older adults grows, their economic choices will have increasing impact on society. Research on the effects of aging on intertemporal decisions shows inconsistent, often opposing results, indicating that yet unexplored factors might play an essential role in guiding one's choices. Recent studies suggest that episodic future thinking, which is based on the same neural network involved in episodic memory functions, leads to reductions in discounting of future rewards. As episodic memory functioning declines with normal aging, but to greatly variable degrees, individual differences in delay discounting might be due to individual differences in the vitality of this memory system in older adults. We investigated this hypothesis, using a sample of healthy older adults who completed an intertemporal choice task as well as two episodic memory tasks. We found no clear evidence for a relationship between episodic memory performance and delay discounting in older adults. However, when additionally considering gender differences, we found an interaction effect of gender and autobiographical memory on delay discounting: while men with higher memory scores showed less delay discounting, women with higher memory scores tended to discount the future more. We speculate that this gender effect might stem from the gender-specific use of different modal representation formats (i.e. temporal or visual) during assessment of intertemporal choice options.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4559386?pdf=render
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AT tobiaskalenscher genderspecificdifferencesintherelationshipbetweenautobiographicalmemoryandintertemporalchoiceinolderadults
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