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Dive into the research topics where Badiâa Bouazzaoui is active.

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Featured researches published by Badiâa Bouazzaoui.


Acta Psychologica | 2010

Aging and self-reported internal and external memory strategy uses: The role of executive functioning

Badiâa Bouazzaoui; Michel Isingrini; Séverine Fay; Lucie Angel; Sandrine Vanneste; David Clarys; Laurence Taconnat

The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of advanced age on self-reported internal and external memory strategy uses, and whether this effect can be predicted by executive functioning. A sample of 194 participants aged 21 to 80 divided into three age groups (21-40, 41-60, 61-80) completed the two strategy scales of the Metamemory in Adulthood (MIA) questionnaire, differentiating between internal and external everyday memory strategy uses, and three tests of executive functioning. The results showed that: (1) the use of external memory strategies increased with age, whereas use of internal memory strategy decreased; (2) executive functioning appeared to be related only to internal strategies, the participants who reported the greatest use of internal strategies having the highest executive level; and (3) executive functioning accounted for a sizeable proportion of the age-related variance in internal strategy use. These findings suggest that older adults preferentially use external memory strategies to cope with everyday memory impairment due to aging. They also support the view that the age-related decrease in the implementation of internal memory strategies can be explained by the executive hypothesis of cognitive aging. This result parallels those observed using objective laboratory memory strategy measures and then supports the validity of self-reported memory strategy questionnaire.


Brain and Cognition | 2007

Aging and strategic retrieval in a cued-recall test: The role of executive functions and fluid intelligence

Laurence Taconnat; David Clarys; Sandrine Vanneste; Badiâa Bouazzaoui; Michel Isingrini

Cued-recall in episodic memory was investigated in relation to low and high cognitive support at retrieval, executive function level and fluid intelligence level in 81 healthy adults divided first into two age groups (young and elderly adults). The first analyses showed that age-related differences were greater when a low cognitive support was provided to recall the words. An individual index of loss of performance when the number of cues was decreased was then calculated. Hierarchical regression analysis revealed that the executive functions measure (perseverative errors on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test) was a better candidate than the fluid intelligence measure (Cattells culture fair test) to account for the age-related variance of the size of performance loss. These findings suggest that age differences in implementing strategic retrieval may be mainly due to a decline in executive functions.


European Journal of Cognitive Psychology | 2009

Ageing and organisation strategies in free recall: The role of cognitive flexibility

Laurence Taconnat; Naftali Raz; Capucine Toczé; Badiâa Bouazzaoui; Hélène Sauzéon; Séverine Fay; Michel Isingrini

The first goal of this experiment was to examine the effect of age on recall and clustering across three successive trials. Sixty-two young (age 20–40 years) and 62 elderly (age 60–80 years) adults learnt a categorised word list for subsequent recall. A clustering index was computed to assess organisational strategy. Results showed that elderly adults performed less well on the recall test and forgot more words across trials. They also indicated that their clustering index was lower than that of younger adults but increased more across trials. Clustering was only associated with the recall scores for the younger adults. Participants were also administered cognitive tests (cognitive flexibility, cognitive speed, and categorical fluency) to explore the possible mediators of memory and organisational strategy performances. Younger adults performed better on all these tests. Statistical analyses revealed that the variable most closely associated with clustering was cognitive flexibility. This finding supports the view that the age-related decrement in strategic organisation is due to a decrease in cognitive flexibility.


Brain and Cognition | 2010

Protective role of educational level on episodic memory aging: An event-related potential study

Lucie Angel; Séverine Fay; Badiâa Bouazzaoui; Alexia Baudouin; Michel Isingrini

The aim of the present experiment was to investigate whether educational level could modulate the effect of aging on episodic memory and on the electrophysiological correlates of retrieval success. Participants were divided into four groups based on age (young vs. older) and educational level (high vs. low), with 14 participants in each group. Event-related potentials (ERP) were recorded while participants performed a word-stem cued-recall task. Age-related memory deficits were greater for the less educated individuals. Age differences in the ERP old/new effects were also modulated by the level of education. This study demonstrated that the effects of age on episodic memory and ERP correlates of retrieval success are smaller in participants with high educational levels than those with lower levels. These findings provide support for the reserve hypothesis and highlight the need to consider individual differences when studying cognitive and cerebral changes in aging.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2010

Episodic memory and organizational strategy in free recall in unipolar depression: The role of cognitive support and executive functions

Laurence Taconnat; Alexia Baudouin; Séverine Fay; Naftali Raz; Badiâa Bouazzaoui; Wissam El-Hage; Michel Isingrini; Anne-Marie Ergis

Executive functioning and memory impairment have been demonstrated in adults with depression. Executive functions and memory are related, mainly when the memory tasks require controlled processes (attentional resource demanding processes)—that is, when a low cognitive support (external aid) is provided. A cross-sectional study was carried out on 45 participants: 21 with depression, and 24 healthy controls matched for age, verbal ability, education level, and anxiety score. Cognitive support was manipulated by providing a categorized word list at encoding, presented either clustered (high cognitive support) or randomized (low cognitive support) to both depressed and healthy adults. The number of words recalled was calculated, and an index of clustering was computed to assess organizational strategies. Participants were also administered cognitive tests (executive functions, cognitive speed, and categorical fluency) to explore the mediators of organizational strategies. Depressed participants had greater difficulty recalling and organizing the words, but the differences between the two groups were reduced for both measures when high cognitive support was provided at encoding. Healthy adults performed better on all cognitive tests. Statistical analyses revealed that in the depressed group, executive functions were the only variable associated with clustering and only when low cognitive support was provided. These findings support the view that the decrement in executive function due to depression may lead to impairment in organization when this mnemonic strategy has to be self-initiated.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2011

Two hemispheres for better memory in old age: Role of executive functioning

Lucie Angel; Séverine Fay; Badiâa Bouazzaoui; Michel Isingrini

This experiment explored the functional significance of age-related hemispheric asymmetry reduction associated with episodic memory and the cognitive mechanisms that mediate this brain pattern. ERPs were recorded while young and older adults performed a word-stem cued-recall task. Results confirmed that the parietal old/new effect was of larger latency and reduced magnitude and less lateralized in the older group than the young group. Correlational and regression analyses indicated that the degree of laterality of brain activity determines the accuracy of memory performance and mediates age-related differences in memory performance among older participants. They also confirmed a cascade model in which the individual level of executive functioning of older adults mediates age-related differences in the degree of lateralization of brain activity, which in turn mediates age-related differences in memory performance.


Psychology and Aging | 2012

Study Time Allocation Deficit of Older Adults: The Role of Environmental Support at Encoding?

Charlotte Froger; Badiâa Bouazzaoui; Michel Isingrini; Laurence Taconnat

The present research evaluated both metacognitive and environmental support accounts of age-related changes in the way study time is adapted to task difficulty. The original aim was to examine whether providing environmental support at encoding would allow older adults to adjust their study time to the task difficulty by using effective encoding strategies. The difficulty of the learning task was manipulated by varying the strength of association of cue-target pairs (i.e., weak vs. strong associates). This allowed us to measure metacognitive control in aging and, specifically, the ability to adjust study time according to task difficulty. The level of environmental support at encoding was manipulated to examine whether it could be used by older adults to adjust their study time according to the task difficulty. In contrast to the classical literature on the effect of aging on metacognitive control, we found that older adults were able to adjust their study time to task difficulty when environmental support was provided. Furthermore, providing encoding strategies with information about their effectiveness helped older adults adjust their study time to task difficulty optimally by improving their strategy use and compensating for their associative memory deficit.


Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2014

Does the greater involvement of executive control in memory with age act as a compensatory mechanism

Badiâa Bouazzaoui; Lucie Angel; Séverine Fay; Laurence Taconnat; Froger Charlotte; Michel Isingrini

Recent behavioural and imaging data have shown that memory functioning seems to rely more on executive functions and on the prefrontal cortex (PFC) in older than in young adults. Using a behavioural approach, our objective was to confirm the hypothesis that young and older adults present different patterns of correlation between episodic memory performance and executive functioning. We report three studies comparing the correlations of young and older adults in a broad range of episodic memory and executive function tasks. The results indicated that memory and executive performance were consistently and significantly correlated in older but not in younger adults. Regression analyses confirmed that age-related differences in episodic memory performance could be explained by individual differences in executive functioning. The results are consistent with the view that memory functioning in aging is accompanied by a shift from automatic to controlled forms of processing. They also generalise the executive hypothesis of episodic memory aging and are in line with the idea that executive functions act as a compensatory mechanism against age-related memory decline.


Neuroreport | 2009

Neural correlates of cued recall in young and older adults: an event-related potential study.

Lucie Angel; Séverine Fay; Badiâa Bouazzaoui; Lionel Granjon; Michel Isingrini

This experiment investigated age differences in electrophysiological correlates of retrieval success in a word-stem cued recall task. Young adults (M±SD: 21.4 years±1.9) performed this memory task more accurately than older participants (M±SD: 65.1 years±3.3). Robust event-related brain potential (ERP) old/new effects were identified in both age groups. The main age differences were observed in latency and lateralization of ERP effects. Young adults exhibited a parietal effect that became focused over left parietal electrodes, whereas no asymmetry was observed in older adults. Moreover, ERP effects were more delayed in the older group. Overall, these findings provide some evidence of the reduction of processing speed during aging and suggest that young and older adults may recruit distinct cerebral patterns during episodic cued recall.


Brain Research | 2010

The amount of retrieval support modulates age effects on episodic memory: Evidence from event-related potentials

Lucie Angel; Michel Isingrini; Badiâa Bouazzaoui; Laurence Taconnat; Kevin Allan; Lionel Granjon; Séverine Fay

This experiment was designed to explore the impact of age and amount of retrieval support on episodic memory and its electrophysiological correlates. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded while young and older participants performed a word-stem cued-recall task in a low-support condition (LSC) in which the stem was composed of three letters, and a high-support condition (HSC) in which the cue consisted of four letters. Behavioral analyses showed that recall in the older group was less accurate than in the young group in the LSC, but no age differences were observed in the HSC. In the LSC, old/new ERP effects at frontal and parietal sites were later and less sustained for the older adults. Furthermore, the parietal old/new effect was symmetrically distributed for older adults, whereas it was predominant over the left hemisphere for their younger counterparts. In addition, young participants demonstrated early and long-lasting frontal and parietal effects in the HSC but with predominance over the right hemisphere, whereas the older adults exhibited a frontal effect and an early and long-lasting parietal effect becoming predominant over the left hemisphere. No age differences in the time course of the parietal old/new effect were observed in this more supportive condition. In addition, in the last period, the left parietal effect was greater for the older group. This study suggests that episodic memory performance and ERP correlates of recall processes are more similar between young and older adults when increased support is provided at retrieval.

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Michel Isingrini

François Rabelais University

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Séverine Fay

François Rabelais University

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Lucie Angel

François Rabelais University

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Laurence Taconnat

François Rabelais University

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Sandrine Vanneste

François Rabelais University

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Alexia Baudouin

Paris Descartes University

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Lionel Granjon

Paris Descartes University

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Naftali Raz

Wayne State University

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Anne-Marie Ergis

Paris Descartes University

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