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A database of general knowledge question performance in older adults

Jennifer H. Coane, Sharda Umanath

2021Behavior Research Methods21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

General knowledge questions are used across a variety of research and clinical settings to measure cognitive processes such as metacognition, knowledge acquisition, retrieval processes, and intelligence. Existing norms only report performance in younger adults, rendering them of limited utility for cognitive aging research because of well-documented differences in semantic memory and knowledge as a function of age. Specifically, older adults typically outperform younger adults in tasks assessing retrieval of information from the knowledge base. Here we present older adult performance on 421 general knowledge questions across a range of difficulty levels. Cued recall data, including data on the phenomenology of retrieval failures, and multiple-choice data are available. These norms will allow researchers to identify questions that are not likely to be known by older adult participants to examine learning or acquisition processes, or to select questions within a range of marginal accessibility, for example. Comparisons with young adult data from prior databases confirms previous findings of greater knowledge in older adults and indicates there is preservation of knowledge from early adulthood into older adulthood.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyCognitionCognitive psychologyGeneral knowledgeRecallSemantic memoryKnowledge baseKnowledge acquisitionCued speechDevelopmental psychologyComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceNeuroscienceMemory Processes and InfluencesDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchIntelligent Tutoring Systems and Adaptive Learning