Marine Beaudoin
University of Savoy
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marine Beaudoin.
Psychological Bulletin | 2011
Marine Beaudoin; Olivier Desrichard
The association between memory self-efficacy (MSE) and memory performance is highly documented in the literature. However, previous studies have produced inconsistent results, and there is no consensus on the existence of a significant link between these two variables. In order to evaluate whether or not the effect size of the MSE-memory performance relationship in healthy adults is significant and to test several theory-driven moderators, we conducted a meta-analysis of published and unpublished studies. A random-effects model analysis of data from 107 relevant studies (673 effect sizes) indicated a low but significant weighted mean correlation between MSE and memory performance, r = .15, 95% CI [.13, .17]. In addition, the mean effect size was significantly moderated by the way MSE was assessed. Memory performance was more strongly related to concurrent MSE (perceived current ability to perform a given task) than it was to global MSE (perceived usual memory ability in general). Furthermore, we found marginally larger MSE-memory performance correlations when the memory situations used to assess MSE involved familiar stimuli. No effect of the method used to assess global MSE or domain MSE (memory rating vs. performance predictions) was found. The results also show that the resource demands of the memory tasks have a moderator effect, as the MSE-performance correlation is larger with free-recall and cued-recall tasks than it is with recognition tasks. Limitations (generalization issues, moderators not considered) and implications for future research are discussed.
Aging & Mental Health | 2012
Nathalie Fournet; Jean-Luc Roulin; Fanny Vallet; Marine Beaudoin; Stefan Agrigoroaei; Cécile Dantzer; Olivier Desrichard
Short-term and working memory (WM) capacities are subject to change with ageing, both in normal older adults and in patients with degenerative or non-degenerative neurological disease. Few normative data are available for comparisons of short-term and WM capacities in the verbal, spatial and visual domains. To provide researchers and clinicians with a set of standardised tasks that assess short-term and WM using verbal and visuospatial materials, and to present normative data for that set of tasks. The present study compiled normative French data for three short-term memory tasks (verbal, visual and spatial simple span tasks) and two WM tasks (verbal and spatial complex span tasks) obtained from 445 healthy older adults aged between 55 and 85 years. Our data reveal main effects of age, education level and gender on older adults’ short-term and WM performances. Equation-based normalisation can therefore be used to take these factors into account. The results provide a set of cut-off scores for five standardised tasks that can be used to determine the presence of short-term or WM impairment in older adults.
Swiss Journal of Psychology | 2017
Marine Beaudoin; Olivier Desrichard
The present research examined the role persistence plays in mediating the positive impact of memory self-efficacy (MSE, i.e., one’s confidence in one’s own memory abilities) on older adults’ memory performance. In three studies, 81 to 264 older adults completed an MSE scale and carried out an explicit episodic memory task, during which we recorded their study time as an indicator of task persistence. We found that higher MSE was indirectly related to better memory performance through greater persistence during encoding, as measured by longer study time. Indirect effects were of medium size, with point estimates ranging from 0.64 to 0.85. This mediation effect was independent of factors that could be confounded with study time: chronological age, memory span, prior level of memory performance, episodic memory ability, and use of learning strategies (encoding strategies and self-testing). When confronted with difficult memory tasks, older adults who lack confidence in their memory abilities cease their efforts prematurely, which contributes to a decrease in their performance. Encouraging older adults to persist in the face of difficulties during encoding and retrieval may help alleviate the negative impact of low MSE on memory performance and allow researchers and clinicians to more accurately estimate older adults’ true memory abilities.
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2012
Yanica Klein-Koerkamp; Marine Beaudoin; Monica Baciu; Pascal Hot
Revue internationale de psychologie sociale | 2009
Marine Beaudoin; Olivier Desrichard
Motivation and Emotion | 2018
Marine Beaudoin
European Review of Social Psychology (Print) | 2015
Fanny Vallet; Stefan Agrigoroaei; Marine Beaudoin; Nathalie Fournet; Jean-Luc Roulin; Olivier Desrichard
Archive | 2009
Marine Beaudoin; Olivier Desrichard
Revue Européenne de Psychologie Appliquée | 2008
Marine Beaudoin; Stefan Agrigoroaei; Olivier Desrichard; Nathalie Fournet; Jean-Luc Roulin
/data/revues/11629088/00580003/07000862/ | 2008
Marine Beaudoin; S Agrigoroaei; Olivier Desrichard; Nathalie Fournet; Jean-Luc Roulin