New paper published on the development of a new face-name memory task!

Congratulations to Renae Mannion, NSF REU fellow and first author on the paper “A novel face-name mnemonic discrimination task with naturalistic stimuli”.

Difficulty remembering faces and names is a common struggle for many people and gets more difficult as we age. Subtle changes in appearance from day to day, common facial characteristics across individuals, and overlap of names may contribute to the difficulty of learning face-name associations. We developed a face-name memory task where we varied face stimuli by similarity, race, sex, and emotional expression as well as the similarity of name stimuli. We tested a sample of healthy young and older adults on this task and found that both age groups showed worsening performance as face-name interference increased.

Overall, older adults struggled to remember faces and face-name pairs more than young adults. However, while young adults remembered emotional faces better than neutral faces, older adults selectively remembered positive faces. Thus, the use of a face-name association memory task designed with varying levels of face-name interference as well as the inclusion of naturalistic face stimuli across race, sex, and emotional expressions provides a more nuanced approach relative to traditional face-name association tasks toward understanding age-related changes in memory.

The article was published in a Special Issue in Neuropsychologia on “Cognitive Neuroscience using Naturalistic Paradigms” and can be found here: Article Link

Stephanie Leal

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