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Developmental Psychology - Old Age Part 3

Psychology20 CardsCreated about 2 months ago

This deck covers key concepts related to cognitive and neurological changes in old age, including types of memory, attention, and disorders.

– caused by strokes or other issues of blood flow in the brain; may be due to diabetes and high cholesterol; have strokes like episodes

• Vascular
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Key Terms

Term
Definition
– caused by strokes or other issues of blood flow in the brain; may be due to diabetes and high cholesterol; have strokes like episodes
• Vascular
have movement or balance (stiffness or trembling); daytime sleepiness, confusion, or staring; trouble sleeping at night and visual hallucinations
• Lewy Bodies
leads to personality and behavior changes and problems in language skills
• Frontotemporal
resulted from gene mutation which impacts movement, behavior, and cognition; personality also changes, loss of coordination, difficulty in swallowing and speaking
• Huntington’s
uncontrollable movements, tremor, stiffness, slow movement, prevalent in men than women; nerve cells in basal ganglia become impaired; L-Dopa as treatment
• Parkinson’s
measure the intelligence of older adults
o Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale • Older adults tend not to perform as well as younger adults in WAIS but the difference is primarily processing sp...

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TermDefinition
– caused by strokes or other issues of blood flow in the brain; may be due to diabetes and high cholesterol; have strokes like episodes
• Vascular
have movement or balance (stiffness or trembling); daytime sleepiness, confusion, or staring; trouble sleeping at night and visual hallucinations
• Lewy Bodies
leads to personality and behavior changes and problems in language skills
• Frontotemporal
resulted from gene mutation which impacts movement, behavior, and cognition; personality also changes, loss of coordination, difficulty in swallowing and speaking
• Huntington’s
uncontrollable movements, tremor, stiffness, slow movement, prevalent in men than women; nerve cells in basal ganglia become impaired; L-Dopa as treatment
• Parkinson’s
measure the intelligence of older adults
o Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale • Older adults tend not to perform as well as younger adults in WAIS but the difference is primarily processing speed and nonverbal performance
– scores drop with age in performance scale and slightly on other scales
• Classic Aging Pattern
brief storage of sensory information
o Sensory Memory
short-term storage of information being actively process
o Working Memory
– linked to specific events; most likely to deteriorate with age
o Episodic Memory
consists of meanings, facts, and concepts accumulated over lifetime learning; little decline
o Semantic Memory
motor skills and habits that once learned; relatively unaffected by age
o Procedural Memory
exceptional breadth and depth of knowledge about the conditions of life and human affects and reflective judgement about the application of knowledge
o Wisdom • May involve the lead to transcendence, detachment from preoccupation with the self • The ability to navigate the messiness of life • Older adults tend to make the most of their abilities, often exploiting gains in one area to offset declines in another
the hardware of the mind and reflect the neurophysiological architecture of the brain that was developed thru evolution
o Cognitive Mechanics • Speed and accuracy, visual and motor memory, discrimination, comparison, and categorization • Decline begins as soon as early midlife
culture-based software program of the mind
o Cognitive Pragmatics • Reading and writing, language, educational qualifications, professional skills, life skills • Decline in old age
– focusing on specific aspect of experience that is relevant and ignoring irrelevant info
o Selective Attention
concentrating on more than one activity at the same time
o Divided Attention
focused and extended engagement with an object, task, event, or some other aspect of the environment
o Sustained Attention
– involves planning actions, allocating attention to goals, detecting and compensating for errors, monitoring progress on tasks, etc
o Executive Attention
ability to remember where one learned something
o Source Memory