Open access · US-GOV
via ClinicalTrials.gov Clinical trial
Thinking About Memory: How Confident Are You in Your Memory, and Does it Change With Age? Investigating Memory Ability and Confidence in Those Attending Memory Clinics.
Authors not listed
King's College London · 2024
Abstract
Memory and our own beliefs and confidence in our ability to remember are important for our daily lives. For example, low confidence may hold us back from doing certain tasks, whereas misplaced high confidence in our memories may lead us to false beliefs about what has happened in the past.
However, it is not fully understood how people form their beliefs about their memory abilities. These beliefs we hold about how good our memory is are form of evaluation of our own abilities known as 'metacognition'. The purpose of this study is to better understand how individuals, both with and without diagnosed memory difficulties, perform memory tasks and examine whether their metacognition of their memory performance depends on the type of memory task. That is, the study examines metacognition for different forms of memory; for example memory of our experienced life events as compared to memory for facts. There is still much more to learn about how individuals experience and think about their memories and memory abilities; and understanding this is important as some evidence suggests that good metacognition is associated with better outcomes after diagnosis of cognitive impairment. Understanding metacognitive beliefs about memory could be a route to earlier diagnosis and enable us to identify people who are likely to develop dementia.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- ClinicalTrials.gov
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-07-02 MST
Cite this
APA
Anonymous. (2024). Thinking About Memory: How Confident Are You in Your Memory, and Does it Change With Age? Investigating Memory Ability and Confidence in Those Attending Memory Clinics. <em>King's College London</em>. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06539403
Vancouver
Anonymous. Thinking About Memory: How Confident Are You in Your Memory, and Does it Change With Age? Investigating Memory Ability and Confidence in Those Attending Memory Clinics. King's College London. 2024.
BibTeX
@misc{anon2024Thinki,
title = {Thinking About Memory: How Confident Are You in Your Memory, and Does it Change With Age? Investigating Memory Ability and Confidence in Those Attending Memory Clinics.},
author = {Anonymous},
journal = {King's College London},
year = {2024},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Massachusetts General Hospital 2025
Open access · US-GOV
Grit Against Cognitive Decline in Aging and Preclinical Alzheimer's Disease
Wake Forest University Health Sciences 2023
Open access · US-GOV
Establishing the Optimal Frequency of Dance Movement for Neurocognitive and Physical Outcomes in People at Risk of Alzheimer's Disease
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) 2024
Preprint · CC-BY
A meta-analysis of age-dependent changes in extracellular vesicle proteins in <i>C. elegans</i>
Behavioural Brain Research 2013
Citation only
Brain aging, memory impairment and oxidative stress: A study in Drosophila melanogaster
Clinical Interventions in Aging 2017
Open access · CC-BY
Cognitive and behavioral evaluation of nutritional interventions in rodent models of brain aging and dementia
Biogerontology 2025
Citation only