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When Mick Jagger first sang “What a drag it is getting old,” he was 23 years old. Now at 69, he is still a veritable Jumpin' Jack Flash on stage. Jagger seems to have found the secret to staying physically fit in his advancing years, but getting old can be a drag on the psyche. Many older adults fear memory loss and worry they are headed down the road to dementia, such as Alzheimer's disease. Every time they forget their keys, leave a door unlocked or fail to remember a name, they are reminded of this nagging concern. In most cases, however, such annoying incidents are part of normal age-related memory loss, not a sign of impending dementia.
Although lots of older adults think such a decline is inevitable, there is good news for many of them. Researchers have developed an array of helpful methods and activities that exercise our minds and bodies that can help keep the older mind in relatively good condition. In this column, we examine the most promising ways to shore up memory in the normal aging brain.
Memory Divided
Memory is not a single entity. The term encompasses several types of remembering, not all of which decline with age. For instance, older people still retain their vocabulary, along with general knowledge about the world (semantic memory). They can also perform certain routine tasks, such as making an omelet or typing on a computer (procedural memory), about as well as they could when they were younger. People do become worse, however, at recalling recent events in their lives (episodic memory) or where they first learned a piece of information (source memory), managing the temporary storage of short-term information (working memory), and remembering to do things in the future (prospective memory).
Prospective memory, in particular, is an important target for memory strategies because forgetting upcoming tasks or appointments can cause considerable frustration or embarrassment. In 2002 psychologist Narinder Kapur of Southampton General Hospital in England and his colleagues reviewed studies on the effectiveness of various common techniques to bolster prospective memory. They found that external aids such as making lists or programming reminders into a cellphone could be helpful in reducing memory problems such as failing to pay bills or attend meetings.
Another successful strategy involves associating information to be recalled with an image, sentence, phrase or word. The more personally relevant the association is, the more likely it is to be remembered, an approach known as self-referential processing. For example, if we need to return a book to the library, we might imagine ourselves doing just that. Made-up acronyms also can be a big help. In this strategy, a person forms a new word from the initial letters of what he or she wants to remember. To remember to buy a birthday gift for his wife, for example, a man might construct the acronym “BIG” for “Buy Gift.”
In 2008 psychologists Betty L. Glisky of the University of Arizona and Martha L. Glisky of the Evergreen Hospital Medical Center described other useful methods for improving memory that involve visual or semantic elaboration. In one of these, a person conjures up images related to something he or she wants to retain. To remember the name “Peggy,” you might imagine a pirate with a wooden (peg) leg. Such a tactic could be helpful as long as you do not end up calling her “Pegleggy.”
A semantic approach entails tacking on words to what you wish to recall. For example, in a music appreciation class that one of us (Arkowitz) took in elementary school, the teacher asked the class to associate the main musical theme of the classical piece, the Peer Gynt Suite, with the following rather silly sentence: “Morning is dawning and Peer Gynt is yawning and music is written by Grieg.” The tie-in with the phrase was designed to help the kids remember the name of the composer.





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5 Comments
Add CommentAfterall, the brain is plastic. Age is just a number.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisThanks for this. I'm 70 and am having problems. I should try this stuff, at least. Peace.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisLinkages between memory and age are very interesting and important in life. Some people lose memory and some people do not. Memory can be retained through Yoga and keeping physically fit and well. I think that memory is directly connected to health (physical, mental and spiritual) and fruitful use of brain.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisS. N. Tiwary
Director
Ex-Vice-Chancellor (acting)
Dean, Head
Reply to ewedlock
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisI think of this as exercising my mind.
I have computer board game software. I learn a new game to challenge my mind. When I have mastered it, I learn another new game.
I play neighborhood games on Facebook. I rearrange my town, farm etc. periodically to resemble a real place.
Without checking a map, I list all 50 states.
Challenge your mind. Try something new. Try doing something a new way. It will keep your mind in tiptop shape and make life a lot more interesting. Have fun!
Memory and other functions of the brain slow down as one explains away any discomforting situation by comforting ideas, explanations.Mind escapes absorbing the disliked (unpleasant) situation, explains away by complaining, blaming others, feeling guilty, blaming fate, I will be successful in future and so on.This is like 'sleep' for the mind. Absorbing the psychological discomfort 'as it is' attunes the brain to supreme relaxation with alertness.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thishttps://sites.google.com/site/yvchawla/fusion-2