“…While value-directed memory effects have been documented under a variety of circumstances, including when attention is divided (Middlebrooks, Kerr, et al, 2017; Siegel & Castel, 2018b; cf. Elliott & Brewer, 2019; Siegel et al, 2021), when attention is involuntarily captured by emotional stimuli (Eich & Castel, 2016), in spatial memory paradigms (Schwartz et al, 2020; Siegel & Castel, 2018a, 2018b; Siegel et al, 2021), in recognition memory paradigms (Elliott & Brewer, 2019; Elliott et al, 2020; Hennessee et al, 2018; Middlebrooks, Murayama, et al, 2017; Spaniol et al, 2014), in young adults with lower working memory capacity (Hayes et al, 2013; Robison & Unsworth, 2017), in cognitively healthy older adults (Ariel et al, 2015; Castel et al, 2013; Siegel & Castel, 2018a; Spaniol et al, 2014), and, to a lesser extent, in both patients with Alzheimer’s disease (Castel et al, 2009; Wong et al, 2019) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (Castel, Humphreys, et al, 2011; Castel, Lee, et al, 2011), it would be useful to determine if these past findings persist under the specific learning conditions tested in the present studies, and in a more diverse lifespan sample.…”