“…The article by Maylor and Badham (2018) highlights the importance of time of day for associative memory performance. Following on previous studies implicating circadian rhythm, as a moderator of age-related differences in memory (e.g., May, Hasher, & Stoltzfus, 1993), this article shows that older adults' associative memory deficit is the largest when older adults are tested at their nonoptimal times and younger adults are tested at their optimal times. Interestingly, the deficit is minimized when older adults are tested at their optimal times and young adults at their nonoptimal times, and the authors suggest that one potential modulating factor in the effect of time of the day on age-related associative memory deficits is its effect on strategic/elaborative encoding (e.g., Naveh -Benjamin, Brav, & Levy, 2007) and on engaging in recollected processing and strategic retrieval (e.g., Cohn, Emrich, & Moscovitch, 2008), both of which are particularly involved in associative memory performance.…”