“…Similar to the neuropsychological explanations offered to account for memory distortions in frontal patients, false facial recognition in older individuals has been attributed to an age-related deficit in context recollection and a corresponding increase in the use of familiarity when making face memory decisions [1,3,47,64,74]. Furthermore, it has been suggested that the context-recollection deficit responsible for the increased susceptibility of older adults to face memory illusions reflected an age-related decline in frontal lobe function [5,18,64]. This theoretical formulation is consistent with other evidence that automatic memory processes such as familiarity remain relatively invariant with age while more controlled memory processes such as recollection and source monitoring show agerelated decline [28,30,33,76,83], and also with neuroimaging studies demonstrating prominent changes in frontal lobe structural/functional integrity with increasing age [8,15,27,78].…”