“…In these tasks, information that subjects have to process are first presented and next followed by a cue indicating if the information must (or not) be kept in memory for later recall or recognition. Thus, greater directed forgetting effects were reported in elderly than young subjects with working memory (Andrès, Van der Linden, & Parmentier, 2004) and episodic memory tasks when the item method (in which the "remember" or "forget" cue directly follows the presentation of each item) of the directed forgetting paradigm was used (Earles & Kersten, 2002;Gamboz & Russo, 2002;Hogge, Adam, & Collette, 2008;Sego, Golding, & Gottlob, 2006;, experiment 1) but not when the list method (in which the cue is presented after the whole list of items) was used (Sego et al, 2006;Zellner & Bäuml, 2006;see, however, Zacks et al, 1996, experiment 2). Otherwise, studies that measured inhibitory effects in memory using the fan effect (e.g., Anderson, 1974) demonstrated that the retrieval of previously learned memories in older adults is slowed by the enrichment of target information with irrelevant associations .…”