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Forget someone’s name? Don’t panic…

It’s common for seniors to struggle to recall a word that’s on the tip of their tongue, a new study shows.
University of Michigan researchers found that this type of memory lapse occurred in 61 percent of 105 healthy, highly educated older adults aged 65 to 92.

The participants filled out a checklist of the memory errors they made in the previous 24 hours and underwent several other tests. About half of them reported making errors that may be related to absentmindedness, such as forgetting where they placed an item or having to reread a sentence because they forgot what it said.

The study was published online in the journal Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition.
The findings may help brain-training programs target memory problems that older people experience in daily life, rather than those that occur in laboratory tests, said senior study author and psychology professor Cindy Lustig.

“We wanted to identify which errors still occur despite changes people might be making in their environment and routine. That’s where it may be especially important to change the person,” she said in a university news release.

Lustig stressed that occasionally forgetting a name or word does not meant that an elderly person is in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease or another type of dementia.


This article has been republished in part or full from an Age in Place Professionals member's website. Read the orignal article at the author's website >>

avatar About Patricia Grace

Founder and CEO of Aging with Grace. founded in 2005, offers comprehensive eldercare service for the working families of the US & Canada. The mission of Aging with Grace is to educate, coordinate and facilitate eldercare options one family at a time. Patty is also the host of "Aging with Grace" on BlogTalkRadio.

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