AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how accurate self-assessment of abilities (insight) relates to cognitive functions, particularly time-based prospective memory (PM), in nondemented older adults engaging in daily activities.
  • - Researchers assessed 88 older adults on various cognitive tasks, including memory and executive functioning, and compared these results with their self-ratings of performance in instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs).
  • - Results indicated that poorer time-based PM was linked to a greater tendency to overestimate one’s own IADL abilities, suggesting traditional executive function measures might not fully capture this self-assessment discrepancy.

Article Abstract

Objective: Accurate appraisal of one's own abilities (i.e., insight) is necessary for appropriate compensatory behaviors and sustained independence during aging. Although insight is often purported to be related to executive functioning (EF), nuanced understanding of the cognitive correlates of insight for functional abilities among nondemented older adults is lacking. Because insight shares neuroanatomic underpinnings with time-based prospective memory (PM), the present study examined the contributions of time-based PM, beyond event-based PM and other potential cognitive confounds (i.e., episodic memory, time estimation, and EF), in predicting insight into one's own performance on instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) among community-dwelling older adults.

Method: A group of 88 nondemented, community-dwelling older adults completed performance-based measures of time- and event-based PM, episodic memory, time estimation, and EF, as well as IADL tasks followed by self-appraisals of their own IADL performance as indices of insight.

Results: Time-based PM was moderately-to-strongly associated with insight, beyond event-based PM, time estimation, and episodic memory [(1,83) = 11.58, = .001, = .122], as well as beyond EF and demographic covariates [(1,79) = 10.72, = .002, = .119].Specifically, older adults who performed more poorly on a time-based PM task overestimated the efficiency of their own IADL performance to a greater extent.

Conclusions: Findings suggest that nondemented older adults with poorer time-based PM may be more prone to inaccurately appraising their functional abilities and that this vulnerability may not be adequately captured by traditional EF measures.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1355617724000614DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

older adults
20
functional abilities
12
community-dwelling older
12
episodic memory
12
time estimation
12
time-based prospective
8
prospective memory
8
insight functional
8
nondemented older
8
memory time
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!