Top Banner
1 *Note: If you find errors or fail to find your abstract, please contact Brittany Nicks, the Conference Coordinator - [[email protected]] COGNITIVE AGING CONFERENCE APRIL, 2010 POSTER SESSION 1 Thursday afternoon Neuroscience 1. Diffusion tensor imaging detects age-related white matter change over a two-year follow-up which is associated with working memory decline. Rebecca A. Charlton, Thomas R; Barrick, Robin G. Morris, Hugh S. Markus. 2. Do compensation and dedifferentiation co-occur in the aging brain? Further evidence from a 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT working memory study. Catherine Ludwig, Christian Chicherio, Anik de Ribaupierre. 3. Decreased inter-regional relationships among D1 receptors in aging. Anna Rieckmann, Sari Karlsson, Per Karlsson, Yvonne Brehmer, Lars Farde, Lars Nyberg, Lars Bäckman. 4. Similar patterns of brain activation in younger and older persons during verbal fluency: An fMRI study. Sari Karlsson, Anna Rieckmann, Håkan Fischer, Lars Bäckman. 5. Tapping cognition: An fMRI study on rhythmic timing, expertise, and the aging brain. A. Lavrysen, K. J. Leuven, R. T. Krampe, N. Wenderoth. 6. Effects of aging on the neural basis of associative priming. Ilana T. Z. Dew, Kelly S. Giovanello. 7. Own-age bias in attention and memory. Natalie C. Ebner, Marcia K. Johnson. 8. Comparison of semantic and alternating semantic fluency during normal aging: Evidence from functional near-infrared spectroscopy. I. Tournier, C. Gagnon, L. Desjardins-Crépeau, M. Desjardins, V. Postal, S. Mathey, F. Lesage, L. Bherer. 9. Investigating effects of parametric manipulation and white matter integrity on age-related neural differences. Ruchika Shaurya Prakash, Susie Heo, Kirk I. Erickson, Stanley J. Colcombe, Arthur K. Kramer. 10. Learning while remembering: Neural correlates of successful encoding during retrieval in young and older adults. Avery A. Rizio, Nancy A. Dennis, Roberto Cabeza. 11. Aging reduces attentional modulation on selectivity in fusiform face area. Joshua Goh, Atsunobu Suzuki, Denise Park. 12. Thalamic Fiber projection integrity in normal aging. Deborah M. Little, Evan Schulze, Elizabeth K. Geary.
24

Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

Jul 12, 2015

Download

Documents

marina761
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

1

*Note: If you find errors or fail to find your abstract, please contact Brittany

Nicks, the Conference Coordinator - [[email protected]]

COGNITIVE AGING CONFERENCE – APRIL, 2010

POSTER SESSION 1 – Thursday afternoon

Neuroscience

1. Diffusion tensor imaging detects age-related white matter change over a two-year follow-up which is associated with working memory decline. Rebecca A. Charlton, Thomas R; Barrick, Robin G. Morris, Hugh S. Markus.

2. Do compensation and dedifferentiation co-occur in the aging brain? Further evidence from a 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT working memory study. Catherine Ludwig, Christian Chicherio, Anik de Ribaupierre.

3. Decreased inter-regional relationships among D1 receptors in aging. Anna Rieckmann, Sari

Karlsson, Per Karlsson, Yvonne Brehmer, Lars Farde, Lars Nyberg, Lars Bäckman.

4. Similar patterns of brain activation in younger and older persons during verbal fluency: An fMRI

study. Sari Karlsson, Anna Rieckmann, Håkan Fischer, Lars Bäckman.

5. Tapping cognition: An fMRI study on rhythmic timing, expertise, and the aging brain. A. Lavrysen, K. J. Leuven, R. T. Krampe, N. Wenderoth.

6. Effects of aging on the neural basis of associative priming. Ilana T. Z. Dew, Kelly S. Giovanello.

7. Own-age bias in attention and memory. Natalie C. Ebner, Marcia K. Johnson.

8. Comparison of semantic and alternating semantic fluency during normal aging: Evidence from functional near-infrared spectroscopy. I. Tournier, C. Gagnon, L. Desjardins-Crépeau, M. Desjardins, V. Postal, S. Mathey, F. Lesage, L. Bherer.

9. Investigating effects of parametric manipulation and white matter integrity on age-related neural differences. Ruchika Shaurya Prakash, Susie Heo, Kirk I. Erickson, Stanley J. Colcombe, Arthur K. Kramer.

10. Learning while remembering: Neural correlates of successful encoding during retrieval in young and older adults. Avery A. Rizio, Nancy A. Dennis, Roberto Cabeza.

11. Aging reduces attentional modulation on selectivity in fusiform face area. Joshua Goh, Atsunobu Suzuki, Denise Park.

12. Thalamic Fiber projection integrity in normal aging. Deborah M. Little, Evan Schulze, Elizabeth K. Geary.

Page 2: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

2

13. BOLD Variability with age. Douglas D. Garrett, Natasa Kovacevic, Anthony R. McIntosh, Cheryl L. Grady.

14. The default network: Not so default? Brian A. Gordon, Carrie Brumback, Chun Yu Tse, Gabriele Gratton.

15. Age-related changes in cross-hemispheric communication: From white matter to functional connectivity to behavior. Simon W. Davis, James Kragel, David Madden, Roberto Cabeza.

16. CBF-CMRO2 coupling differentially drives BOLD responses in younger and older visual cortex. Joanna L. Hutchison, Mary Jo Macejewski, Andrew J. Hillis, Lee Jordan, Traci I. Sandoval, Hanzhang Lu, Bart Rypma.

17. Patterns of age-related regional cortical thinning differentially predict cognitive performance in multiple domains across the lifespan. Kristen M. Kennedy, Karen M. Rodrigue, Richard D. King, Denise C. Park.

18. ERP correlates of distractor processing in young and old healthy adults. Anusha Ramchurn, David Bunce.

19. White matter integrity is altered with increased body weight in older females. K. Walther, L. Ryan.

20. Effects of resting cerebral blood flow on cognitive aging in a lifespan sample of healthy adults. Karen M. Rodrigue, Andrew C. Hebrank, Kristen M. Kennedy, Denise C. Park.

21. Remedial effects of motivational incentive on declining cognitive control: Individual differences in performance benefits and white-matter connectivity. K. R. Ridderinkof, J. Buitenweg.

22. Structural neuroimaging and cognition using euthymic bipolar patients in old age. Delaloye Christophe, Moy Guenaёl, de Bilbao Fabienne, Hofer Françoise, Ragno Paquier Claire, Weber Kerstin, Baudois Sandra, Giannakopoulos Panteleimon.

23. Retrieval of associations in familial Alzheimer’s Disease: An fMRI study. Yakeel Quiroz, Kim Celone, Adriana Ruiz, Meghna Majithia, Francisco Lopera, Chantel Stern.

24. A conceptual model for neurodegenerative disease, cognitive reserve, and their evaluation by neuropsychological tests and biomarkers. Rochelle E. Tractenberg.

25. White matter pathways associated with verbal episodic and working memory, measured using tract-based spatial statistics in normal aging. Rebecca A. Charlton, Thomas A. Barrick, Hugh S. Markus, Robin G. Morris.

26. Behavioural and neural correlates of response time variability in healthy older adults. Sarah Bauermeister, Adrian Williams, David Bunce.

27. Medial temporal, frontal lobe, and environmental support contributions to the errorless learning effect. Nicole D. Anderson, Emma Guild, Andree-Ann Cyr, Linda Clare.

Memory

Page 3: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

3

28. When familiarity collides with gist. Nicole D. Anderson, Julia Czyzo, Christopher Martin, Stefan Köhler.

29. New insights regarding working memory, secondary memory, and higher-order cognition across the lifespan. Nathan S. Rose, Joel Myerson, Jill T. Shelton, Elaine Tamez, Dunesha De Alwis, Sandra Hale.

30. Age-related associative deficits are absent with nonwords. Stephen P. Badham, Elizabeth A. Maylor.

31. The isolation effect in young and older adults. Rebekah E. Smith.

32. Episodic word memory in older adults benefits from sentence study contexts. Laura E. Matzen, Aaron S. Benjamin.

33. Effects of aging, change of mnemonic strategy (shifting) and environmental support on a free recall task. Capucine Toczé, Michel Isingrini, Badiâa Bouazzaoui, Laurence Taconnat.

34. Survival of the youngest: The effect of aging on the survival processing advantage. Chelsea M.Stillman, Jennifer H. Coane.

35. Age differences in memory for names: The role of remembering mediating semantic information. Susan Old, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin.

36. Aging changes how we remember irrelevant information. Nigel Gopie, Lynn Hasher, Fergus I. M. Craik.

37. Survival and evolutionary effect in adaptive memory of younger and older adults. Karen Lau, Lixia Yang.

38. Type of assessment moderates the relationship between memory self-efficacy and memory performance: Evidence from a meta-analysis. Marine Beaudoin, Oliver Desrichard.

39. Can younger and older adults harness the power of emotion to boost memory for neutral items. Cynthia May, Kristen Biernot.

40. The effects of self-referential processing on the specificity of memory with age. Avala Hamami, Sarah J. Serbun, Angela H. Gutchess.

41. Evidence for a positivity bias in episodic but not semantic memory. Jennifer Tomaszczyk, Myra Fernandes.

42. The role of age-related differences in forgetting fates in producing a benefit of expanded over equal spaced retrieval. Geoff B. Maddox, David A. Balota, Jennifer H. Coane, Janet M. Duchek.

43. Age-related differences in memory for crime information: Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence. Kimberly B. duggins, Amy A. Overman, Joseph D. W. Stephens, Meredith Allison.

44. Distraction as an opportunity for implicit rehearsal in older and younger adults. Renee K. Biss, Lynn Hasher.

Page 4: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

4

45. Distraction from the past is another source of interference for younger and older adults. Ruthann Thomas, Lynn Hasher.

46. Spontaneous and directed recognition in the young and elderly. Benjamin Anderson, Larry Jacoby.

47. Aging effects on spatial orientation and topographical memory. Ergis Anne-Marie, Albert Sylvie, Fabre Ludovic, Grosjean Caroline, Seraphin John.

48. Recollection and familiarity in amnestic mild cognitive impairment. Nicole D. Anderson, Angela K. Troyer, Kelly J. Murphy, Fergus I.M. Craik, Morris Moscovitch, Andrea Maione.

49. Is mild cognitive impairment associated with markers of biological vitality and lifestyle activity? Sanda Dolcos, Anna Braslavsky, Bonnie P. Geall, Stuart W.S. MacDonald, Roger A. Dixon

50. Age deficits in implicit perceptual associative learning of arbitrary sequences. Jessica R. Simon, James H. Howard Jr., Darlene V. Howard.

Genetics

51. Cytokine gene-gene interaction associated with the ability to utilize retrieval support in episodic memory among healthy older adults. Daniel Fűrth, Sari Karlsson, Martin Bellander, Yvonne Brehmer, Olle Bergman, Elias Eriksson, Laura Fratiglioni, Lars Bäckman.

52. The moderating role of the BDNF gene in age-related declarative memory decline: A population-based study. Margareta Hedner, Lars-Göan Nilsson, Maria Larsson.

53. A twin study of context processing in aging. William S. Kremen, Matthew S. Panzzon, Hong Xian, Carol E. Franz, Michael D. grant, Kristen C. Jacobson, Rosemary Toomey, Michael J. Lyons.

54. Testosterone modifies the impact of APOE genotype on hippocampal volume and memory performance in middle age. Mathew S. Panizzon, Richard Hauger, Anders M. Dale, Christine Fennema-Notestine, Michael D. grant, Sally Mendoza, Michael J. Lyons, Hong Xian, William S. Kremen.

55. The effect of DBH genotype on executive control in healthy older adults. Jennifer Kim, Chandramalika Basak, Ellen Clarke, Kirk I Erickson, Ruchika Shaurya Prakash, Michelle V. Voss, Karl J. Fryxell, Raja Parasuraman, Pamela m. Greenwood, Arthur F. Kramer.

56. Age-related differences in white matter diffusion and their relation to cognitive function are determined by APOE status. L. Ryan, K. Walther, E. L. Glisky.

57. Longitudinal changes in memory and executive functioning in cognitively healthy APOE carriers. K. Walther, E. L. Glisky, L. Ryan.

Driving

58. Cognitive training decreases risk of motor vehicle crash involvement among older drivers. Karlene Ball, Jerri E. Edwards, Leslie A. Ross, Gerald McGwin, Jr.

59. Cognitive performance and self-regulation of driving behavior over time in older adults. Melissa L. O’Connor, Jerri D. Edwards, Brent J. Small, Ross Andel.

Page 5: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

5

60. Braking or not braking, that is the question: Investigating older driver’s response strategies in reaction to simulated challenging driving events. Sylvain Gagnon, Alexandre Bélanger.

61. No age effects on the slowing of target search by GPS information in automobile driving scenes. François Maquestiaux, André Didierjean, Eric Ruthruff, Alan Hartley.

62. Hazzard perception in older drivers. C. T. (Chip) Scialfa, Micheline Dechênes, Mark Horswill, Mark Wetton, Jennifer Ference.

63. Should street signs be printed in uppercase for older drivers. Neil Charness, Michael Champion, Ainsley Mitchum, Mark Fox.

64. Visual attention characteristics among younger and older drivers: Is accident history reflected in visual attention performance. Kazuma Ishimatsu, Toshiaki Miura, Kazumitsu Shinohara.

Training

65. Memory training effects in old age as markers of plasticity: A meta-analysis. F. Zehnder.

66. Effects of notetaking training on note fidelity and recall in healthy older adults. Jill S. McClung, Lori J. P. Altmann, Leslie Gonzalez Rothi, Michael Marsiske, John C. Rosenbek.

67. Aging and executive functioning: Training executive performance through various aspects of verbal fluency. Christine Sutter, Jacqueline Zoellig, Mike Martin.

68. The effectiveness of an intensive process-based spatial memory training in old adults. Anne Eschen, Matthia Bischofberger, Philippe Rast, Mike Martin.

69. Evidence-based strategies for improving memory function among older adults. Alden L. Gross, Jeanine M. Parisi, George W. Rebok, Jean Ko, Adam P. Spira, Quincy M. Samus, Jane S. Saczynski, Steven Koh, Ronald E. Holtzman.

70. Transfer of verbal self-instruction training in older adults. Jutta Kray, Julia Karbach, Sandra Mang.

71. Transfer and maintenance effects after adaptive working memory training in older adults. Erika Borella, Barbara Carretti, Rossana De Beni.

72. Do young-old and old-old adults profit equally from executive control and working memory training. Matthias Kliegel, Melanie Zeintl, Katharina Zinke.

73. Proactive interference training effects in healthy older adults. Kristy Douglas, Dale Dagenbach, Mariette C. Champagne, Janine M. Jennings.

74. Understanding the role of presentation pace for learning in a time-sensitive task. Jamye M. Hickman, Wendy A. Rogers, Arthur D. Fisk.

POSTER SESSION 2 – Friday morning

Parkinson’s Disease

Page 6: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

6

1. Cognitive functioning of older adults with and without Parkinson’s Disease. J.D. Edwards, E.A. Hahn, C.B. Haley, A.J. McLaughlin, M. O’Connor, C. Peronto.

2. Neurocognitive inconsistency in Parkinson’s Disease and normal aging: An 18-month longitudinal study. Cindy M. de Frias, Roger A. Dixon, Richard Camicioli.

3. Side of motor symptom onset influences verbal memory in Parkinson’s Disease. Sheela Chandrashekar, Daniel R. Seichepine, Sandy Neargarder, Alice Cronin-Golomb.

4. Relation between type of initial symptom and everyday visual activities in Parkinson’s Disease. Ivy N. Miller, Daniel R. Seichepine, Sandra Neargarder, Alice Cronin-Golumb.

5. Quality of life and motor symptom profile in individuals with Parksinson’s Disease. Erica R. Appleman, Karina Stavitsky, Barrett Phillips, Alice Cronin-Golomb.

6. Clock drawing strategies in healthy adults and patients with Parkinson’s Disease. Rachel Mullins, Daniel R. Seichepine, Sandra A. Neargarder, Alice Cronin-Golomb.

7. Concordance between self-report and informant report on activities of daily living in non-demented individuals with Parkinson’s Disease. Mirella Diaz-Santos, Daniel R. Seichepine, Sandy Neargarder, Alice Cronin-Golomb.

8. Visual enhancements improve performance on activities of daily living in Parkinson’s Disease and healthy aging. Daniel R. Seichipene, Stephanie Reynolds, Sandy Neargarder, Grover C. Gilmore, Alice Cronin-Golomb.

9. Gender differences in the association of mood and cognition in Parkinson’s Disease. Barrett D. Phillips, Erica Appleman, Alice Cronin-Golomb.

Attention

10. Aging and involuntary attention capture by salient objects: An electrophysiological study. Alison Gemperle, Eric Ruthruff.

11. Sustained selective attention in the presence of distracters: No difference in healthy old age. Cliodhna Quigley, Søren K. Anderson, Matthias M. Műller.

12. Age-related differences in spatial attention depend on multiple switches of attention. Gurjit Singh, Kathy Pichora-Fuller.

13. Attentional inhibition following multiple orienting cues is not altered in healthy aging. Linda K. Langley, Nora D. Gazur, Alyson L. Saville, Shanna L. Morlock, Angela G. Bagne.

14. Sexual words might inhibit young Canadians, but they energize the French (especially older ones). Didierjean André, François Maquestiaux, Sandrine Viellard, Alan Hartley, Ruthruff Eric.

15. Cueing the target: Examining the effect of cues to ameliorate age-related deficits in attentional control. Destiny Lynn Miller, Molly McLaren, Robin Brown, Caitlin McGarry, Jordan Lane, Andrea M. Weinstein, Kirk I. Erickson.

16. ERP correlates of focus switching and aging effects. Tianyong Chen and Paul Verhaeghen.

Page 7: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

7

17. Evaluation of the Flanker Task across the lifespan: Interference or inhibition? Gérad Nisal Bischof, Karen M. Rodrigue, Kristen M. Kennedy, Denise C. Park.

18. Aging, attention and visual short-term memory: Effects of cross-modal cueing. Ashley Curtis, Susan Murtha.

Working Memory

19. Episodic memory performance is related to attentional refreshing in working memory. Vanessa Loaiza, David McCabe.

20. Age differences in processes contributing to working memory performance. Myriam C. Sander, Markus Werkle-Bergner, Ulman Lindenberger.

21. Selective frontal compensation during working memory retrieval contributes to reduced neural discrimination with age. Yang Jiang, Adam Lawson, Chunyan Guo.

22. Working memory capacity and variability in response times in young and older adults: The role of task complexity. Delphine Fagot, Christian Chicherio, Anik de Ribaupierre.

23. Age, interference, and working memory: The effect of item similarity on focus switching. K. L. Bopp, M. C. McClain.

24. Working memory and secondary memory as predictors of fluid intelligence. Duneesha De Alwis, Joel Myerson, Sandra Hale, David McCabe.

25. Aging and similarity-based interference in syntactic processing: An eye-movement study. Xuefei Gao, Matthew C. Shake, Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow.

26. Inhibitory functioning with age and the relation to working memory decline. Mervin Blair, Joni Shuchat, Karen Li.

27. Age-related differences in the precision of visuo-spatial working memory representations. Hannes Noack, Martin Lövdén.

28. Between- and within-person coupling between working memory and mood: The impact of task difficulty. Daniel Grűhn, Jason Allaire, Shevaun Neupert.

29. Contributions of working memory capacity in age-related differences in focus switching. Chandramallika Basak, Arthur F. Kramer.

Speed

30. Top-down processing moderates age differences in noise effects during visual search. Wythe Whiting, Katherine Blackburn, Camille Sample, Kelly Camus.

31. Delineating inter-and intraindividual variability in speeded two-choice response times across the lifespanlll: A hierarchical Bayesian extension to diffusion modeling. Christian Chicherio, Judith Dirk, Joachim Vandekerckhove, Anik de Ribaupierre.

32. Processing speed and executive functions in cognitive aging: How to disentangle their mutual relationships. Cédric Albinet, Cédric Bouquet, Geoffroy Boucard, Michel Audiffren.

Page 8: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

8

33. Processing speed mediates working memory, but not visual search. A behavioral and functional imaging study of older adults. Ilana J. Bennett, Meghana Karnik-Henry, M. Amanda Earl Colby, Bart Rypma.

Sensation, Acuity, and Perception

34. Effects of hearing acuity and age on recall of spoken passages under continuous and self-paced conditions. T. Piquado, A. Lash, A. Wingfield.

35. Memory for meaning and surface structure in spoken passages: Effects of hearing acuity, age and working memory load. Jonathan Benichov, Patricia A. Tun, Arthur Wingfield.

36. Effects of aging on haptic object recognition. Krista Overvliet, Johan Wagemans, Ralf Krampe.

37. Reduced ability to detect facial configuration in middle-aged and elderly individuals. Daniel Norton, Ryan McBain, Yue Chen.

38. Effects of aging on central and peripheral integration within the auditory modality. Dana R. Murphy, Jessica Tanner, Brent Spehar, Mitchell S. Sommers, Laura Lapadula.

39. Electrophysiological evidence for age-related decline in visual motion perception. Regina Triplett, Tim Martin, Krystel R. Huxlin, Voyko Kavcic.

40. Aging and collision detection on a curved trajectory. Zheng Bian, George J. Anderson.

41. False Hearing: Age differences in meta-audition. Chad S. Rogers, Larry L. Jacoby, Mitchell S. Sommers.

Health and Cognitive Aging

42. Effects of prenatal under-nutrition on cognitive function at age 58. Julie E. Yonker, Susanne R. de Rooij, Hans Wouters, Rebecca C. Painter, Tessa J. Roseboom.

43. Mean cell volume (MCV) and cognitive performance in older adults. Alyssa A. gamaldo, Alan B. Zonderman, Dan L. Longo.

44. Improving speed of processing in adults with HIV: A pilot study. David Vance, Janice C. Marceaux, Pariva L. Fazeli.

45. Predictors of cognitive performance in adults with HIV. David Vance, Pariya L. Fazeli, Janice C. Marceaux.

46. Examining the relationship between self-reported pain and memory failure: A daily diary study. Sarah R. Weatherbee, Jason C. Allaire, Shevaun D. Neupert, Kelli d. Allen.

47. Examining dynamic links between cognition and health in old age: Evidence from the AHEAD cohort of HRS. Frank J. Infurna, Denis Gerstorf, Lindsay H. Ryan, Jacqui Smith.

48. Mixed urinary incontinence is associated with impaired executive functions in community dwelling older women. Maxime Lussier, Mélanie Renaud, Sima Chiva-Razavi, Chantale Dumoulin, Louis Bherer.

Page 9: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

9

49. Influence of hypertension and antihypertensive medication use on cognition in middle-aged male twins. Terrie Vasilopoulos, Carol E. Franz, Michael D. grant, Michael J. Lyons, Rosemary Toomey, Hong Xian, Kristen C. Jacobson, William S. Kremen.

50. Cognitive reserve as a protective factor for vascular depression. Daniel Paulson, Mary Elizabeth Bowen, peter A. Lichtenberg.

51. Cognitive performance in older adults with and without Fibromyalgia. Ian Robertson, Renee Shimizu, Laura Zettel-Watson, Dana N. Rutledge, C. Jessie Jones, Barbara J. Cherry.

52. The association between health-related problem solving and health literacy among older adults with hypertension. Jessie Chin, Dan Morrow, Laura D’Andrea, Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow, Thembi conner-Garcia, James Graumlich, Michael Murray.

53. The longitudinal association of depressive symptoms and cognitive impairment in older adulthood: Results from the DYNOPTA project. Allison A. M. Bielak, Kim Kiely, Kaarin J. Anstey.

54. Health literacy differences in older adult comprehension of illustrated health documents. Laura D’Andrea, Katie Kopren, Jessie Chin, Dan Morrow, Elizabeth A. Stine-Morrow, Thembi Connor-Garcia, James Graumlich, Michael Murray.

55. A multi-faceted cognitive health coaching intervention for older adults in a home environment. Holly B. Jimison, Misha Pavel.

56. Vascular risk modifies selected age-sensitive abilities in healthy adults. Chery Dahle, Naftali Raz.

57. Intraindividual variability in neurocognitive speed performance in Type 2 Diabetes. Bonnie P. Geall, Roger A. Dixon, Stuart W. S. MacDonald, Ashley L. Fischer, David F. Hultsch.

58. Do biomarkers mediate Type 2 Diabetes-cognition relationships: Exploring structural models. G. Peggy McFall, Sanda Dolcos, Stuart W. S. MacDonald, Roger A. Dixon.

59. Labour market outcomes among older people and interactions between cognitive functioning, mental health, and physical health. David Haardt.

60. Age and education differences in evening cortisol and relationship of evening cortisol to declarative memory. Gilda E. Ennis, Shevaun D. Neupert.

Prospective Memory

61. Absence of age effects in a naturalistic event-based task: Implications for prospective memory and aging paradox. Lia Kvavilashvili, Diana E. Kornbrot.

62. Dismantling the ‘age-prospective memory paradox’: The classic laboratory paradigm simulated in a naturalistic setting. P. E. Bailey, J. D. Henry, P. G. Rendell, L. H. Phillips, M. Kliegel.

63. The age-prospective memory paradox: A comprehensive test of possible mechanisms. Katharina M. Schnitzspahn, Andreas Ihle, Matthias Kliegel.

64. Aging, prospective memory and emotion: Benefits of emotionally positive and personality salient tasks. Peter G. Rendell, Julie D. Henry, Louise H. Phillips, Matthias Kliegel.

Page 10: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

10

65. Time-based prospective memory and aging: The role of time estimation, clock monitoring, and executive function. Sandrine Vanneste, Alexia Baudouin, Badiâa Bouazzaoui, Laurence Taconnat, Michel Isingrini.

66. Collaborative effects on adults’ prospective memory performance. Jennifer A. Margrett, Celinda Reese Melancon, Samantha Young, Laura Temple, Allison P. Linde.

67. Age differences in fluctuations of executive control revealed by performance on prospective memory tasks. Shannon Robertson.

68. Toward a comprehensive prospective memory aid for older adults. Nicole Fink, Richard Pak.

69. Delay-execute prospective memory and aging: Differences in monitoring? Andrew J. Kelly, Christopher Hertzog.

70. Differential components of prospective memory across the lifespan. Mattli Florentina, Zoellig Jacqueline.

71. Age-related differences in Alpha and Theta oscillations in a prospective memory task. Jacqueline Zelligh, Irene Fallegger, Claudia Lűchinger.

72. Implementation intentions and imagery: Individual and combined effects on prospective memory. Craig P. McFarland, Elizabeth L. Glisky.

73. The relation between implementation intentions and frontal lobe function in prospective memory. Craig P. McFarland, Elizabeth L. Glisky.

74. Prospective memory in Parkinson’s Disease and healthy aging during a virtual week. Nathan S. Rose, Erin Foster, Mark A. McDaniel, Peter . Rendell.

75. The effects of context expectation on older and younger adults' prospective memory performance. Terrence Kominsky, Celinda Reese-Melancon.

POSTER SESSION 3 – Friday afternoon

Emotional Processing

1. The influence of age and cognitive variables on emotion recognition. Sheena M. Horning, R. Elizabeth Cornwell, Hasker P. Davis.

2. Age differences in emotion regulation efficiency. Erin Senesac, Fredda Blanchard-Fields.

3. Age-related differences in the effective connectivity during emotion regulation. Christina M. Leclerc, Elizabeth A. Kensinger.

4. Turn that frown upside down: The effects of age on the neural correlates of cognitive reappraisal of emotion. Brandy N. Johnson, Jennifer Van Loon, Robert West.

5. Common and unique mechanisms mediate age-related differences in the recognition of different emotions from faces. Atsunobu Suzuki, Hiroko Akiyama.

Page 11: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

11

6. Simple accountability instructions improve older adults’ emotion recognition accuracy. Jennifer Tehan Stanley, Derek M. Isaacowitz.

7. Cognitive consequences of expressive regulation during amusing and sad mood inductions. Lisa Emery.

8. Creation and norming of an emotional speech test for younger and older listeners. Kate Dupuis, M. Kathleen Pichora-Fuller.

9. Age-related differences in associative recognition: Effects of emotional valence and arousal. Benton H. Pierce, Elizabeth A. Kensinger, Melissa J. Hawthorne.

10. Deliberate real-time mood regulation in adulthood: The importance of age, fixation, and attentional processing. Monika Lohani, Soo Rim Noh, Derek M. Isaacowitz.

11. Emotional reactivity to daily disruptions. Stacey Scott, Fredda Blanchard-Fields, Christiane Hoppmann.

12. Emotional responses to music in the elderly: Reduced negativity effect and emotional de-differentiation. Sandrine Vieillard, Alexa Pijoff.

13. The influence of aging and emotionality on heart rate variability in a change detection. Jessica Tanner, Dana R. Murphy, Michel J. Johnson, Jim McAuliffe.

14. Age differences in the emotional modulation of attention: The interplay between emotional cues and attentional control. Soo Rim Noh, Derek Isaacowitz.

15. Cognitive control effort, motivational priority, and age-related positivity effects in gaze. Eric S. Allard, Derek M. Issacowitz.

16. Mood and misinformation: Affective influences on age differences in susceptibility to false information. Lauren E. Popham, Thomas M. Hess, Tonya Elliott, Lisa Emery.

17. Age-related change in automatic attention allocation to emotional stimuli as measured with event-related potentials and behavioral reactions. Tara L. Noecker, Michael A. Kisley.

18. Age differences in associative memory: The influence of emotional stimuli. Rachel Newsome, Audrey Duarte.

19. Emotion, memory, and aging: Evidence from taboo Stroop effects. Deborah M. Burke, Elizabeth R. Graham, Donald G. MacKay.

20. Emotional memory in American vs. Chinese older adults. Christie Chung, Ziyong Lin.

Memory

21. Aging effects on spatial orientation and topographical memory. Anne-Marie Ergis, Albert Sylvie, Fabre Ludovic, Grosjean Ludovic, Grosjean Caroline, Seraphin John.

22. Frequency, impact, and within-person predictors of everyday cognitive failures: A daily diary study. Jacqueline Mogle, Martin Sliwinski, Joshua Smyth.

Page 12: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

12

23. Primary and secondary memory estimates derived from working memory span tasks: Relationships with age and fluid intelligence. David P. McCabe, Vanessa Loaiza.

24. Relationships between achievement goals, memory self-efficacy, and word recall in adults. Erin C. Hastings, robin L. West, Kevin R.Stone.

25. Searching for an optimal blend of exposure time and repetition for younger and older adults in a face-name learning paradigm. Ashley Meyer, Sara H. Halcomb, Jessica M. Logan.

26. Eye movements and memory for objects and their locations in younger and older adults. Katie L. Meadmore, Shui-I I. Shih, Simon P Liversedge.

27. Use of self and close other reference for source memory with age. Nicole M. Rosa, Angela H. Gutchess.

28. Effects of aging on material-general and material-specific source memory retrieval. Michael R. Dulas, Audrey Duarte.

29. Semantic encoding enhances the pictorial superiority effect in the oldest old. Katie E. Cherry, Jennifer L. Silva Brown, Erin M. Jackson, Emily A. Smitherman, Emily O. Boudreaux, Julia Volaufova, M. Michael Jazwinski.

30. Remembering the past and imagining the future: The role of age and individual differences between young and older adults. Rossana De Beni, ErikaBorella.

31. The influence of age and enactment on the serial position curve of episodic memory tasks: Evidence from the Betula study. Veit Kubik, Sverker Sikström, Lars-Göran Nilsson.

32. Episodic autobiographic retrieval: Memories dissolving with time. Andrea Vranic.

33. The age effects on the neural correlates of episodic retrieval mode: An ERP study. Juan Li, Ting Zhou.

34. Priming of aging stereotypes yields a dissociation between accurate and false recall. Ann Lambert, Justin Potts, Jason M. Watson.

35. Recognition of targets and critical lures in older adults with high and low medial temporal lobe function. Alexandra Fortin, Nicole Caza.

36. Age differences in the use of context to prevent binding errors in event memory. Julie L. Earles, Alan W. Kersten.

37. Perceptual context effects in young and older adults’ false recognition. Donna J. LaVoie, Kethera Fogler.

38. Age differences in veridical and false recall after incidental and intentional encoding: The role of individual difference variables. Barbara Bucur, Jacob Bolzenius, James Armbruster, Cassandra Cross, Joshua Westhoelter, Travis Short.

39. Why do older adults repeat stories to the same people? Nigel Gopie, Fergus I. M. Craik, Lynn Hasher.

Page 13: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

13

Alzheimer’s Disease

40. Mental status deficits in prodromal Alzheimer’s Disease: A collaborative analysis. Brent J. Small, John J. McArdle, Martin J. Sliwinski, Kenneth M. Langa, Lenore Launer, Richard B. Lipton, John c. Morris, Glenn E. Smith, Martha Storandt, Robert S. Wilson.

41. Intrusive thinking reliably discriminates between normal healthy older adults and early Alzheimer’s Disease. Christopher B. Rosnick, David A. Balota.

42. Practice effects on task switching in adults with early Alzheimer’s Disease. Saddam Kanaan, Joan McDowd, Patricia Pohl.

43. Which kind of prospective memory failures characterize very mild Alzheimer’s dementia? An investigation of focal and nonfocal prospective memory performance. Jill Talley Shelton, Mark A. McDaniel, David A. Balota, Jennifer Breneiser, Sarah Moynan.

44. Effects of contextual interference on a mirror-reading paradigm in Alzheimer’s Disease. Sarah Merbah, Thierry Meulemans.

45. Accelerated cognitive decline in preclinical dementia – differences in change point and rate of decline between Alzheimer’s Disease and vascular dementia. Erika J. Laukka, Stuart W. S. MacDonald, Lars Bäckman.

46. Persons with Alzheimer’s disease overestimate their confidence in general knowledge. Sari Karlsson, Ericka Jonsson Laukka, Laura Fratiglioni, Lars Bäckman.

47. Cognitive profiles in dementia: Alzheimer’s Disease versus nondemented aging. David K. Johnson, Martha Storandt, Zachary D. Langford, James E. Galvin.

48. Episodic memory in healthy elderly and mild Alzheimer’s Disease: Differentiation with cognitive event related potentials. Z.Tieges, K. W. Kilborn, J.Price, B. A. Conway, A. Hughes, G. S. McLean.

49. Effects of stimulus characteristics of a computerized bingo game on performance in aging, Alzheimer’s Disease, and Parkinson’s Disease. Thomas M. Laudate, Sandy Neargarder, Pallavi Joshi, Grover C. Gilmore, Alice Chronin-Golomb.

50. The effects of luminance and contrast on object location in normal aging and Alzheimer’s Disease. Maryln Colon, Daniel Seichepine, Sandy Neargarder, Tom Laudate, Grover C. Gilmore, Alice Cronin-Golomb,

51. Level of education and performance on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA): New recommendations for education corrections. Erin K. Johns, Natalie A. Phillips, Ziad S. Nasreddine, Lesley Bergman, Shelley Solomon, Julie Desormeau, Daniele Ostiguy, Howard Chertkow.

52. Digit cancellation task Is affected by both sensory and cognitive deficits. Bruce Reese, Chelsea Toner, Tatiana Riedel, Grover C. Gilmore, Alice Cronin-Golomb.

Metamemory and Metacognition

53. The influence of age on underconfidence with practice: An examination of the memory-for-past –test theory. Sarah K. Tauber, Matthew G. Rhodes, Ashley White, Ana M. Senior.

Page 14: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

14

54. Older adults know that they won’t know your name: Age invariance in feeling-of-knowing metamemory predictions for episodic and semantic memory. William D. Harris, Deborah K. Eakin, Christopher Hertzog.

55. Age-related differences in the ability to monitor currently relevant memories. Yana Fandakova, Yee Lee Shing, Ulman Lindenberger.

56. Aging and monitoring of associative and item-specific encoding in a cued recall task. Meredith M. Patterson, Christopher Hertzog.

57. Over and above memory decline, getting older improve pessimistic view of memory and aging. Vallet Fanny, Desrichard Olivier.

58. Internal strategies or active lifestyles? Young and older adults’ beliefs about effective ways to mitigate memory decline. Monique Ositelu, Kristi Summers, Michelle Horhota, Tara Lineweaver, Christopher Hertzog.

59. Memory, self efficacy decline: Associations with cognitive performance, affect, and personal beliefs about age and memory.

60. Metacognitive improvement by young and older adults in a value-directed remembering task. Shannon McGillivay, Alan Castel.

61. Age relations on study time allocation in a verbal and a spatial task. Lacy Elise Krueger.

62. Younger and older adults’ reliance on metacognitive knowledge in source monitoring. Beatrice G. Kuhlmann, Dayna R. Touron.

63. Age differences in monitoring recollection: Prospective judgments of remembering and knowing (JORKS) Nicholas C. Soderstrom, David P. McCabe.

64. Age and subjective ratings of strategy effectiveness predict recognition of items and associations. Andrew R. Bender, Naftali Raz.

65. How to promote memory transfer in older adults? The role of metacognitive principles training and theory of mind. Elena Cavallini, Sara Bottiroli, John Dunlosky, Christopher Hertzog, Serena Lecce.

66. Age differences in word recall prediction accuracy. Amanda Trujillo, Ann Pearman.

67. Metacognitive awareness of the associative deficit in older adults. Angela Kilb, Asira Usubaloieva, Lauren Butler, Lindsay Wicher, Jane Berry.

68. Judgments of learning are related to both objective and subjective performance indices. Jarrod Hines, Christopher Hertzog.

69. Does trial-level performance feedback influence age differences in response criteria and strategy selection? Dayna R. Touron, Christopher Hertzog.

70. Learning about the spacing effect: The role of instruction and feedback in JOLs in younger and older adults. Jessica M. Logan, Sara H. Halcomb, Candan Ayse, Alan C. Castel.

Page 15: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

15

71. Memory self-efficacy decline: Associations with cognitive performance, affect, and personal beliefs about age and memory. Stefan Agrigoroaei, Olivier Desrichard.

Stress

72. Daily fluctuations in cognitive interference: Negative affect matters less for older adults. Shevaun Neupert, Michele A. Heflin, Mary Catherine Nelson, Verena A. Rogas.

73. Influence of hlealth-related stress on medical decision making in older adults. Joy M. Jacobs-Lawson, Mitzi M. Schumacher, Courtney Ortz, Erin Waddell, Suzanne Arnold.

74. Driven to stress: Cortisol reactivity to a driving simulation and its effects on memory. Michael J. Polito, Margie E. Lachman, Nicolas Rohleder.

75. Guided relaxation / meditation: A useful tool for combating lab-induced physiological stress in younger and older adults. Dustin Souders, Ryan Yordon, Patricia Hamilton, Neil Charness.

76. The effects of stress during early adulthood on verbal working memory processes in late middle age. Michael J. Lyons, Michael Grant, Matthew Panizzon, Carol Franz, Ruth Murray, Rosemary Tomney, Hong Xian, William Kremen.

POSTER SESSION 4 – Saturday morning

Exercise

1. The heart-brain connection: Effects of aerobic exercise on heart rate variability and executive performance in the elderly. Cédric Albinet, Geoffroy Booucard, Cédric Bouquet, Michel Audiffren.

2. Physical activity intervention for frail older adults: Specific impacts on executive functions, working memory, and quality of life. Francis Langlois, Thien Tuong Minh Vu, Kathleen Chassé, Louis Bherer.

3. Effects of two programs of physical activity on executive functions in aging people. Michael Audiffern, Aamira Abou-Dest, Nathalie André, Cédric Bouquet.

4. The effect of three months of aerobic training on task complexity and response preparation in normal older adults as a function of baseline fitness level. Melanie Renaud, François Maquestiaux, Steve Joncas, Marie-Jeanne Kergoat, Louis Bherer.

5. Physical activity protects cognition in dementia. Amber Watts, David K. Johnson.

6. The association between physical function and cognition in a middle-aged (Vietnam Era) twin cohort. M. D. Grant, W. S. Kremen, C. E. Franz, M. S. Panizzon, R. Toomey, R.E. Murray, H. Xian, M. J. Lyons.

7. The effect of diet, sleep, and exercise on cognitive functioning in older and younger adults. Alexandria Wennberg, Abigail Frawley, Aviva Ariel, Echo Leaver.

Page 16: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

16

8. Plasticity of brain networks in a randomized intervention trial of exercise training in older adults. Michelle W. Voss, Ruchika S. Prokash, Kirk I. Erickson, Chandramalika Basak, Amanda Szabo, Siobhan M. White, Thomas R. Wojciki, Emily Klamm, Edward McAuley, Arthur F. Kramer.

Motor Behavior, Posture, and Gait

9. Age-related differences in the coordinative structure of the golf swing. Tae Hoon Kim, Richard J. Jagacinski, Steven A. Lavender.

10. Does martial arts expertise moderate age-related changes in postural control. Caroline Smolders, Mihalis Doumas, Ralf Th. Krampe.

11. Executive functions, chunking, and movement implementation in rapid finger sequencese: Effects of age and skill. Ralf Krampe, Ann Lavgrysen.

12. Adaptation and somatosensory reintegration in young and older adults’ postural control. Michail Dourmas, Ralf Th. Krampe.

13. Cognitive aspects of gait and balance in the elderly. Misha Pavel, Holly B. Jimison.

14. Age-related deficits in low-level inhibitory motor control. Elizabeth A. Maylor, Kulbir S. Birak, Friederike Schlaghecken.

Language, Reading, and Speech

15. Age-related changes in ambiguous text processing: An ERP study. Chia-lin Lee, Kara D. Federmeier.

16. Semantic priming is non-monotonically related to stimulus quality. Grover D. Gilmore, Alice Cronin-Golomb, Grace Lee, Tatiana Riedel, Karen Groth.

17. Spelling homophones gets better with age: Influences from orthography and semantics. Katherine K. White, Meghan A. Protasi, Lise Abrams.

18. Message complexity affects completeness of information in the picture descriptions of older adults. Jonathon Pl Wilson, Lori J. P. Altmann, Amy E. Wadeson.

19. Language-specific attention control in aging. Hilary d. Duncan, Natalie A. Phillips, Norman Segalowitz.

20. Patterns of language performance in aging: The role of executive function and memory. Avron Spiro, Christopher Brady, Mira Goral, Keely Sayers, Joshua Berger, Loraine Obler, Martin Albert.

21. Paradoxical effects of syllable frequency on young and older adults’ picture naming. Meagan T. Farrell, Lise Abrams.

22. When distracters aren’t distracting: Influence of frequency on older adults’ picture naming. Sabra Pelham, Meagan T. Farrell, Lise Abrams

23. Semantic richness and conceptual ageing (I): Feature number and picture naming. Rico Duarte Liliana, Marquié Jean-Clajde, Robert Christelle.

Page 17: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

17

24. Semantic richness and conceptual ageing (II): Conceptual production from the perceptual or functional distinctive descriptors. Rico Duarte Liliana, Tijus Charles E. A., El-Massioui Farid.

25. Eye movements of young and older adults while reading paragraphs with distraction. Ellen Rozek, Susan Kemper, Joan McDowd.

26. Influence of age, SOP, WM, and vocabulary on syntactic processing. David Caplan, Gloria Waters, Gayle DeDe, Jennifer Michaud.

27. Age differences in processing narrative text: Managing multiple characters. Soo Rim Noh, Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow.

28. Age differences in detection of textbase or situational inconsistency during narrative comprehension. Soo Rim Noh, Matthew C. Shake, Brennan Payne, Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow.

29. Methodology: Scoring story recall protocols using text analysis software. Erin C. Hastings, Robin L. West, Kevin R. Stone.

30. Mind wandering in younger and older adults: Evidence from SART and reading for comprehension. Jonathan D. Jackson, David A. Balota.

31. Aging and vulnerability of speech production to dual task demands. Susan Kemper, RaLynn Schmaalzried, Lesa Hoffman, Ruth Herman.

32. Tracking sentence planning and production. Susan Kemper, Daniel Bontempo, Whitney McKedy, LaLynn Schmalzried, Bruno Tagliaferri, Doug Kieweg.

33. Aging and lexical ambiguity relolution: Is there an advantage to being bilingual? Shanna Kousaie, Natalie A. Phillips.

34. Early bilingualism is associated with better implicit sequence learning and executive control in old age. Jennifer C. Romano, Darlene V. Howard, James H. Howard.

35. Reaching for words and non-words: Age-related differences revealed in movement dynamics. Ashley S. Bangert, Richard A., Abrams, David A. Balota.

36. Speech compression - latency functions for older and younger adults. Raymond M. Stanley, Jonathon Benichov, Arthur Wingfield.

37. Predicting fluid intelligence and listening comprehension across the adult lifespan. Elaine Tamez, Sandra Hale, Joel Myerson, Nathan Rose, Mitchell Sommers, Nancy Tye-Murray, Brent Spehar.

38. Tracking talking. Ruth Herman, Susan Kemper, Lesa Hoffman, Doug Kieweg.

39. Aging and the time course of sentential context effects in spoken word recognition. Kate Pirog Revill, Daniel Spieler.

Decision Making and Complex Cognition

40. Rules vs. similarity across the lifespan: Older adults rely on rules, children on similarity in estimation and categorization. Rui Mata, Bettina von Helversen, Linnea Karlsson, Henrik Olsson.

Page 18: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

18

41. Effects of cognitive variables on Tower of Hanoi performance in children, young, middle-aged, and elderly adults. Hasker P. Davis, Nicole Torrence, R. Elisabeth Cornwell, Kelli J. Klebe.

42. Priming effects in young and older adults’ ability to solve riddles. Elizabeth Crandall, Pamela I. Ansburg, Lori E. James.

43. Age-related differences in within-trial strategy change. Eléonore Ardiale, Patrick Lemaire.

44. Spatial mental representation from description and map: When older adult performance reaches that of younger counterparts. Chiara Meneghetti, Erika Borella, Rossana De Beni.

45. Pretrial publicity and juror age affect juror decision making. Christine L. Ruva, Elizabeth M. Hudak

46. Using generative strategies to improve older adults’ reality monitoring. Margeaux V. Auslander, Angela H. Gutchess.

47. Examining domain-specific relationships between cognitive functioning in older adulthood and performance on observed tasks of daily living. Taryn R. Patterson, Sarah R. Weatherbee, Jason C. Allaire.

48. Mediation of age-related changes in decision making in children, adults, and elderly. Kevin Beitz, R. Elisabeth Cornwell.R

49. You can’t have it both ways: Resolving between-task competition in a task-switching paradigm. Ridwaan Albeiruti, Mary K. Askren, Cindy Lustig.

50. Switches that stick: Perseveration increases when switching from weaker to stronger response-sets. Dawn A. Morales, H. Branch Coslett, Sharon L. Thompson-Schill.

51. In the zone: Flow state and cognition among older adults. Brennan Payne, Soo Rim Noh, Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow.

52. The effect of extended cueing periods on task-switch performance in late adulthood. Andrea M. Weinstein, Jules r. Glaser, Jessa M. Tunacao, Robin L. Brown, Destiny L. Miller, Kirk I. Erickson.

53. Age differences in sequential tapping with cognitive load. S. A Fraser, K. Z. H. Li, V. B. Penhune.

54. The effect of task priority instructions in a dual-task paradigm: Perspectives of gender and aging. Nathalie Castonguay, Maude Laguё-Beauvais, Laurence Desjardins-Crépeau, Louis Bherer.

55. What can we learn from effect sizes associated with age differences in decision making performance. Mitzi M. Shumacher, Joy M. Jacobs-Lawson.

56. Preferences fir involvement of others in decision making. Courney L. Ortz, Johy M. Jacobs-Lawson, Christopher C. Gayer.

57. The impact of task complexity on age differences in information search strategies and decision outcomes. Tara Queen, Gilda Ennis, Thomas M. Hess, Daniel Grühn.

Page 19: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

19

58. Effects of age differences, cognitive abilities, task demands, and interfaces on the selection of information foraging strategies. Jessie Chin, Wai-Tat Fu.

59. Do older adults prefer less choice? The influence of choice set size and relevance of importance on preferred number of options. Pi-Ju Liu, Stacey Wood.

60. Reward seeking behavior in older and younger adults. Echo Leaver, Robert McInnis.

Applied Cognition

61. Exploring the generalizability of a successful arts intervention. Helga Noice, Tony Noice.

62. Promoting cognitive growth through the Baltimore Experience Corps program. Jeanine M. Parisi, George W. Rebok, Michelle C. Carlson, Katherine D. Giuriceo, David Maron, Teresa E. Seeman.

63. Older adults’ strategies for aging in place. Cara Bailey Fausset, Andrew J. Kelly, Wendy A. Rogers, Arthur D. Fisk.

64. The effect of mental model quality on older adults’ dependence on automated systems. Katherine E. Olson, Arthur D. Fisk, Wendy A. Rogers.

65. The role of COMT status and aviation expertise in flight simulator performance. Quinn Kennedy, Joy Taylor, Art Noda, Greer Murphy, Jerome Yesavage.

66. Wilingness of older adults to learn a complex interface for a perceived benefit. Laura A. Whitlock, Anne Collins McLaughlin, Jason C. Allaire.

Using Technology

67. Understanding age-related problems of everyday technologies. Marita A. O’Brien, J. S. Burnett, W. A. Rogers, A. D. Fisk.

68. Age-related differences in performance in a dual-task environment with an automated aid. Sara E. McBride, Wendy A. Rogers, Arthur D. Fisk.

69. Enhancing the adoption of personal health records by older adults: A qualitative analysis of older user’s health information needs and strategies. Margaux Price, Richard Pak, Hendrik Müller, Aideen Stronge.

70. Age differences on web credibility evaluation. Qingzi Liao, Wai-Tat Fu.

71. Playing against aging. Guido Band

72. Age and emotion recognition. A comparison of virtual robotic agent, synthetic human, and human facial expressions. Jenay M. Beer, Wendy A. Rogers.

73. Speech versus keyboard input for older users. Ryan Best, Neil Charness.

74. Designing ethical home-based technologies for older adults. Kelly E. Caine, L. Jean Camp, Kay Connelly, Lesa Lorenzen-Huber, Kalpana Shankar.

Page 20: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

20

75. Impact of judgments of learning during technology-driven task training. R. E. Yordon, N. Charness, K. Dijkstra.

POSTER SESSION 5 – Saturday afternoon

Individual Differences

1. The role of cognition in differentiating between low and high performing older adults. Sara J. Czaja, Joseph Sharit, Sankaran Nair, Mario Hernandez.

2. The “Big Five” meets the “Big 4”: Personality-cognition relations across adulthood. Andrea Soubelet, Timothy Salthouse.

3. Exploring bidirectional relationships between everyday cognitive engagement and cognition over time and the role of personality in moderating such relationships: One year longitudinal findings. Jonathan Starkweather, Bert Hayslip Jr., Robert Maiden.

4. Facet-level personality and cognition in older adults. Eileen Kranz Graham, Margie Lachman.

5. Possible selves and competence in relation to cognition. Alissa Dark-Freudeman, Robin Lea West, Erin Hastings.

6. Rumination mediates the relationship between neuroticism and cognitive function. Elizabeth Munoz, Jennifer Morack, Heather King, Robert S. Stawski, Joshua Smyth, DMartin J. Sliwinski.

7. The oldest-old: A focus on Australians with comparisons to the US. Lesley A. Ross, Kaarin J. Anstey.

8. Typical intellectual engagement: A comparison between young and old adults. lAnna Mascherek, Daniel Zimprich.

9. Inter- and intraindividual variability across the lifespan. Anik de Ribaupierre, Judith Dirk, Christian Chicherio, delphine Fagot, Thierry Lecerf, Paolo Ghisletts.

10. Level and variability in cognitive performance across the lifespan: Effecfs of age and task complexity. Judith Dirk, Paolo Ghisletta, Christian Chicherio, Anik de Ribaupierre.

11. Putting the “everyday” back into the study of everyday cognition. Jason C. Allaire, Sarah R. Weatherbee, Shevaun D. Neupert.

12. Modeling reaction time performance and variability using mixed beta regression models. Philippe Rast, Daniel Zimprich.

13. Behavioral and neural correlates of intraindividual variability in working memory. Stuart W. S. MacDonald, Håkan Fischer, Anna Rieckmann, Sari Karlsson, Lars Bäckman.

14. The association between everyday activities and general cognitive ability in a middle-aged twin cohort. R. E. McKenzie, M. D. Grant, W.S. Kremen, C. E. Franz, M. S. Panizzon, M. Schultz, R. Toomey, H.l Xian, M. J. Lyons.

Page 21: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

21

15. The dynamic within-person relationship between subjective sleep measures and cognition in older adults. Alyssa Gamaldo, Sarah Weatherbee, Jason Allaire.

16. The bootstrap as a solution to the problem of unequal variances in analyzing age differences using factorial designs. Elizabeth R. Graham.

17. The presence of depressive symptoms in amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment contributes to impaired object-based semantic knowledge. B.L. Callahan, C. Hudon, J. Macoir, N. Auclair-Ouellet, S. Belleville, F. Rousseau, V. Plante, S. Joubert.

Longitudinal Studies

18. Tracking cognitive change from 55 to 95 years of age: Findings from the Victoria Longitudinal Study. Brent J. Small, Roger A. Dixon, John J. McArdle.

19. A longitudinal investigation of repressive coping in older adults. J. A. K. Erskine, L. Kavilashvili, L. Myers, S. Leggett, S. Davies, S.Hiskey, J. Hogg.

20. Revisiting Birren’s BioAge: Linking biological and cognitive processes in the Victoria Longitudinal Study. Correne A. DeCarlo, Stuart MacDonald, Roger A. Dixon.

21. Differential 8-year verbal memory trajectories of women aged 51-96: The Health and Retirement Survey. Lindsay H. Ryan, Jacqui Smith.

22. Aging, disablement, and dying: Using time-as-process and time-as-resouces metrics to chart late-life change. Nilam Ram, Denis Gestorf, Elizabeth Fauth, Steven Zarit, Bo Malberg.

23. A longitudinal study of the relationship between cognitive functioning and depressive symptoms among dyads. Catharine Sparks, Scott M. Hofer, Andrea M. Piccinin, Linda Wray, Duane F. Alwin.

24. Distinguishing the effects of age, cohort and retest. Scott Hofer.

25. Correlated change across functional domains in late adulthood. Kim Kiely, Kaarin Anstey, Mary Luszcz, Denis Gestorf.

26. Mental stimulation and rate of cognitive change in young and older workers: Results from the VISAT longitudinal study. J. C. Marquié, L. Rico Duarte, P. Bessiers, C. Dalm, J. B. Ruidavets.

27. Predictors of memory complaint over time using the Berlin Longitudinal Study. Ann Pearman, Christopher Hertzog.

28. Aging and dying: Examining the interplay of sample selection, mortality, and rates of cognitive declinle. Tamara Goode, Nilam Ram, Denis Gerstorf, Jacqui Smith, Ulman Lindenberger.

29. Virtual water maze navigation: Stability of age-related differences tasks: Procedural skill or memory? A. M. Daugherty, N. Raz.

30. Midlife cognitive change status as a predictor of change in reasoning accuracy. Julie Blaskewicz Boron, Sherry L. Willis, K. Warner Schaie.

Page 22: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

22

31. Identification of turning points and cohort differences in the rate of change in five cognitive measures of the Long beach Longitudinal Study. Robert F. Kennison, Kevin Petway, Elizabeth M. Zelinski.

Plasticity

32. Behavioral plasticity as an early indicator of age-related cognitive impairment. Jacob Grand, Stuart M. W. MacDonald, Holly Tuokko, David F. Hultsch.

33. Cognitive plasticity in young and older adults: Evidence from a working memory training. Céline Bürki, Catherine Ludwig, Christian Chicherio, Anik de Ribaupierre.

34. Training-induced plasticity of inhibition in old age: Does feedback matter? Andrea Wilkinson, Lixia Yang.

35. Basic forms of cognitive plasticity in young-olds and oldest-olds: Retest learning and maintenance. Lixia Yang, Ralf Th. Krampe, Maureen Reed.

Associative Memory

36. To bind or not to bind, it depends on the question: Aging and binding in visual short-term memory. Shriradha Sengupta, Paul Verhaeghen.

37. Associative memory for money and faces in young and old adults. Michael C. Friedman, Alan D. Castel, Shannon McGillivray, Cynthia C. Flores.

38. The source of the associative deficit in aging: The role of attentional resources for relational processing. So-Yeon Kim, Kelly S. Giovanello.

39. The role of pair familiarity in the associative deficit of older adults. Angela Kilb, Moshe Naveh-Banjamin.

40. The effect of remember/know judgments on an age-related associative deficit. Matt Brubaker, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin.

41. The associative deficit of older adults in long-term and short-term memory. Tina Chen, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin.

42. Effects of self-constural priming on associative memory with age. Hyeon-Nyeon Lee, Angela Gutchess.

43. The role of reduced attentional resources and reduced working memory (WM) resources in older adults’ associative memory deficit. Yoko Hara, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin.

44. The effects of guessing on proper name learning in young and old adults. Shalyn Oberle, Lori E. James, Sarah K. Tauber, Ashley Gunn.

45. Age Differences in Updating Causal Beliefs. Sharon Mutter, Melanie Asriel, Jared Holder.

Social/Affective Processing

Page 23: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

23

46. Loosing a dime with a satisfied mind: Older adults perform worse but are as satisfied as younger adults in a sequential decision making task. Rui Mata, Bettina von Helversen.

47. Using task success to improve older adults’ subsequent memory performance. Tyler Miller, Lisa Geraci.

48. The role of age in simulating the actions of others. Nadine Diersch, Waltraud, Martina Riger, Simone Schütz-Bosbach.

49. Age differences in tradeoff decisions: Older adults prefer choice deferral. Yiwei Chen, Xiaodong Ma, Oliva Pethtel.

50. Age-related changes in gaze following: Does the age of the face matter? Gillian Slessor, Gillian Laird, Louise H. Phillips, Rebecca Bull, Dimitra Filippou.

51. Older adults report less empathy and anxiety in relationships. Sergio Paradiso, Janelle Beadle, Ashley Akubuiro.

Executive Function

52. Executive functions role in strategy repertoire and selection during aging. Suzanne Hodzik, Patrick Lemaire.

53. Cognitive and emotional influences on autobiographical memory specificity in older adults. Carol Holland, Nathan Ridout, Abel Leung.

54. The role of executive function and social cue processing in age differences in theory of mind belief reasoning. Louis Phillips, Rebecca Bull, Roy Allen.

55. Individual differences in frontal functioning modulate age effects on the ERP correlates of retrieval success. Angel Lucie, Fay Séverine, Badiâ Bouazzaoui, Sandrine Vanneste, Michel Isingrini.

56. Does executive level in old age act as a better protective cognitive reserve than cultural level on memory performance. Badiâ Bouazzoui, Severine Fay, Laurence Taconnat, Lucie Angel, Sandrine Vanneste, Michel isingrini.

57. Aging and measures of executive control: A summary of meta-analyses. Paul Verhaeghen.

58. Executive functioning and gambling behaviors in late adulthood. A. C. McCarrey, J. D. Henry, W. von Hippel.

59. Relationships between executive functions, physical activity, and aerobic fitness in younger and older adult groups. Geoffroy Boucard, Cédric Bouquet, Aurelia Bugaiska, Locette Toussaint, Michael Audiffren.

60. Adult age differences in cognitive control of task-set selection and response interference. Cedric A. Bouquet, Geoffroy Boucard, Cédric Albinet, Michael Audiffren.

61. Effects of education level and executive functioning in mnemonic strategies in aging. Sandrine Vanneste, Taconnat Laurence, Lucie Angel, Séverine Fay, Michel Isingrini.

Page 24: Revised Poster Session Schedule(.docx) - Georgia Tech College of ...

24

62. The effect of audio-visual speech information on working memory in younger and older adults. Jana Baranyaiova Frtusova, Axel Winneke, Natalie Phillips.

Learning

63. To use or not to use? … Or what to use? Age-related differences in associative learning strategies. Cora Titz.

64. To err is human … but it can mess up later recognition memory performance: An fMRI-compatible paradigm. Nicole D. Anderson, Andrée-Ann Cyr, Linda Truong.

65. Feedback support requirements for learning a cognitive task: The role of cognitive resources and task complexity. Christopher M. Kelley, Anne Collins McLaughlin.

66. Cognitive skill learning, working memory, and strategic variations in normal aging. Anne-Marie Ergis, Fabre Ludovic, Gandini Delphone.

67. Aging and self-regulated learning of Chinese characters. Jodi Price, Rory Murray, Christopher Hertzog, Joshlyn Pinckley-Shareck, Meredith Knight, Michael Mueller, Anne Olszewski, Emma Dean, Lauren Jones, Terence Strait.

68. Name learning in older and younger adults: Relationships between expanding retrieval and working memory. Elizabeth Helder, John J.Shaugnessy, Erika J. Jacobson.

69. Memory, aging, and interference in a value-based encoding task. Michael C. Friedman, Alan D. Castel.