Home
» Daily
News
Feb.
14 - Grant for Research into Memory and Aging
Brandeis psychologist Margie E. Lachman has been awarded a
$1.45 million five-year grant from the National Institute
on Aging to learn more about factors that can minimize memory
declines in middle-aged and older adults. The research will
identify modifiable beliefs and behaviors that are tied to
better memory and enhanced functioning in everyday life.
Lachman has spent more than two decades researching healthy
adult development through the prism of memory and cognitive
function. She says a sense of control over memory protects
older adults from disruptive anxiety and rumination and promotes
persistence in the face of challenging memory tasks. In short,
to some extent, how we age is up to us. There are a number
of strategies, from stress reduction and organization of information,
to cognitive and physical exercise, that can boost memory
performance in aging adults.
The research will examine how strategy use, anxiety, stress
reactivity, and arousal are tied to beliefs about control
over memory and ultimately to memory performance on a number
of tasks. Lachman's lab will assess several different types
of memory in adults ages 25 to 85 living in the Greater Boston
area. The research will use a variety of assessment techniques,
including measuring stress through cortisol levels and heart
rates, to daily diary keeping to evaluate how and when subjects
feel more or less control over their memory performance.
"Good memory functioning is critical in everyday life
to maintain health, well-being, and independence," says
Lachman. The study's results will be used to help develop
effective interventions to reduce distress, impairment, and
dependence, and to enhance beliefs about aging and memory.
Source: Brandeis University
(View
the Daily News Archive)
|