2022
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2208681119
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Aging is associated with maladaptive episodic memory-guided social decision-making

Abstract: Older adults are frequent targets and victims of financial fraud. They may be especially susceptible to revictimization because of age-related changes in both episodic memory and social motivation. Here we examined these factors in a context where adaptive social decision-making requires intact associative memory for previous social interactions. Older adults made more maladaptive episodic memory-guided social decisions but not only because of poorer associative memory. Older adults were biased toward remember… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…This initial performance difference appeared to be due to a reliance on facial cues to make initial decisions on who to trust. This finding is consistent with a wealth of evidence that facial trustworthiness affects social decisions (Castle et al, 2012;Chang et al, 2010;Todorov et al, 2009;van 't Wout & Sanfey, 2008;Winston et al, 2002) and generally supports the notion of schema reliance (Ebner et al, 2009;Lempert et al, 2022;Mather & Johnson, 2003). Choosing a trustworthy-looking face in the congruent condition of the S-IGT always resulted in profits and little to no losses since the trustworthy face was paired with an advantageous deck.…”
Section: Satisficing Behavior In the Cs-igtsupporting
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This initial performance difference appeared to be due to a reliance on facial cues to make initial decisions on who to trust. This finding is consistent with a wealth of evidence that facial trustworthiness affects social decisions (Castle et al, 2012;Chang et al, 2010;Todorov et al, 2009;van 't Wout & Sanfey, 2008;Winston et al, 2002) and generally supports the notion of schema reliance (Ebner et al, 2009;Lempert et al, 2022;Mather & Johnson, 2003). Choosing a trustworthy-looking face in the congruent condition of the S-IGT always resulted in profits and little to no losses since the trustworthy face was paired with an advantageous deck.…”
Section: Satisficing Behavior In the Cs-igtsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Studies have shown that nonverbal cues like facial expressions and body language can greatly influence trust decisions in repeated interactions, albeit their exact impact is not fully understood yet (Eckel & Wilson, 2003;Morris et al, 1998;Willis & Todorov, 2006). This brings to light the concept of schemas-mental frameworks shaped by past experiences (i.e., based on "schemata"; Bartlett, 1932)-and how they can lead to biases in information processing and decision making (Ebner et al, 2009;Lempert et al, 2022;Mather & Johnson, 2003;Owens et al, 1979).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, older adults recruit brain regions associated with mentalizing and memory to a greater extent than younger adults during trust-related decision-making [36]. Additionally, older adults may be especially vulnerable to maladaptive memory-dependent social decisions [76]. Investigating neural responses during social decision-making is outside of the scope of the present study, but critical for the future to understand the neural underpinnings of age-group differences in behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Our study builds on recent findings highlighting general preferences for social content in both associative (Stewardson et al, 2023) and recognition (Jimenez and Meyer, 2024) memory with older adults being more biased to use familiarity judgements when making decisions about others (Lempert et al, 2022). Yet, none of this work examined how social content is bound to other event elements in episodic memory.…”
Section: Why Is Social Content Prioritized In Episodic Memory?mentioning
confidence: 89%