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Dissociable Mechanisms Underlie Differences Between Memory and Metamemory in Older Adults: The Differentiating Role of Anxiety and Depression Symptoms
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Dissociable Mechanisms Underlie Differences Between Memory and Metamemory in Older Adults: The Differentiating Role of Anxiety and Depression Symptoms

Jennifer L Crawford, Alex A Adornato, Johanna Matulonis, Xi Chen, Jacob M Hooker and Anne S Berry
Hippocampus, Vol.36(3), p.e70100
05/2026
PMID: 42002884

Abstract

Aged Aged, 80 and over Aging - psychology Anxiety - diagnostic imaging Anxiety - physiopathology Anxiety - psychology Depression - diagnostic imaging Depression - physiopathology Depression - psychology Female Hippocampus - diagnostic imaging Hippocampus - metabolism Hippocampus - pathology Humans Male Memory - physiology Metacognition - physiology Middle Aged Neuropsychological Tests Positron-Emission Tomography tau Proteins - metabolism Magnetic Resonance Imaging
The ability to remember (i.e., memory ability) and to accurately discern memory function (i.e., metamemory) are both important facets of cognition. In the present study, we examined the shared and distinct sources of variance across memory ability and metamemory using psychometrically validated measures of memory ability, metamemory, and anxiety and depression symptoms in conjunction with multimodal imaging (i.e., structural MRI, tau PET) in a sample of cognitively normal older adults (N = 72). Replicating a growing body of work, we found that metamemory was more tightly linked to anxiety and depression symptoms relative to objective measures of memory ability. Our results also revealed that the hippocampus was a critical locus of both memory ability and metamemory-hippocampal volume was positively associated with memory ability, but not metamemory, whereas increased hippocampal tau pathology exacerbated the negative effect of anxiety and depression symptoms on metamemory. Importantly, we also found that after controlling for anxiety and depression symptoms and tau burden, there was a positive association between memory ability and metamemory. Our findings also demonstrated the importance of assessing different facets of metamemory; self-reported memory contentment and ability, but not strategy use, showed the strongest relationships with both anxiety and depression symptoms and hippocampal tau burden. Together, these results suggest that both shared and distinct mechanisms underlie memory ability and metamemory processes in older adults. Chiefly, this work highlights the potential of metamemory measures as sensitive tools to understand affective processes that occur in both healthy and pathological aging, independent of memory ability.
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https://doi.org/10.1002/hipo.70100View
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