Publications by authors named "Maria L Armilio"

Article Synopsis
  • The study examined how younger (average age 23.4) and older adults (average age 73.3) performed on word-list learning tasks over four days and at different times of the day.
  • Younger adults generally outperformed older adults in recall and recognition tests, but time of day had no significant effect on performance for either group.
  • Older adults were more prone to false memories and showed inconsistent performance, suggesting potential issues related to declining frontal lobe function with age.
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Article Synopsis
  • Alcohol consumption increases errors in cognitive tasks that require attention and response control, particularly in a go/no-go task.
  • Both low and moderate doses of alcohol lead to more mistakes compared to sober performance and affect the brain's electrical activity related to stimulus response.
  • The findings suggest that alcohol impairs the ability to focus and manage responses, disrupting how we process information and recognize mistakes.
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Focal damage to the basal ganglia is relatively rare, and little is known about the cognitive effects of damage to specific basal ganglia structures. A 28-year-old, highly educated male (patient RI) sustained a unilateral left ischemic infarction involving primarily the putamen and secondarily the head of the caudate and the anterior internal capsule. Two detailed neuropsychological assessments, at 3 and 16 months post-infarction, revealed that a majority of cognitive abilities were spared.

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We examine the hypothesis that the efficiency of executive control processes is less stable over time in older than younger adults. An age-related decrease in the efficiency of executive control should result in an increase in performance variability in task conditions requiring the recruitment of executive control processes and not in task conditions requiring minimal involvement of executive control. Performance variability was similar for younger and older adults in task conditions requiring minimal executive control and greater for older than younger adults in task conditions requiring executive control.

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This study investigated the hypothesis that the influence of time of day on the efficiency of working memory is greater for older than younger adults. Groups of younger and older adults performed a working memory task on 4 consecutive days, twice in the morning and twice in the evening. Objective (body temperature) and subjective (alertness ratings) measures of arousal were taken during each session.

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