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Dive into the research topics where Michel Isingrini is active.

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Featured researches published by Michel Isingrini.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2000

Aging, episodic memory feeling-of-knowing, and frontal functioning.

Céline Souchay; Michel Isingrini; Laurence Espagnet

Groups of normal old and young adults made episodic memory feeling-of-knowing (FOK) judgments and took 2 types of episodic memory tests (cued recall and recognition). Neuropsychological tests of executive and memory functions thought to respectively involve the frontal and medial temporal structures were also administered. Age differences were observed on the episodic memory measures and on all neuropsychological tests. Compared with young adults, older adults performed at chance level on FOK accuracy judgments. Partial correlations indicated that a composite measure of frontal functioning and FOK accuracy were closely related. Hierarchical regression analyses showed that the composite frontal functioning score accounted for a large proportion of the age-related variance in FOK accuracy. This finding supports the idea that the age-related decline in episodic memory FOK accuracy is mainly the result of executive or frontal limitations associated with aging.


Consciousness and Cognition | 2007

The effect of aging in recollective experience: The processing speed and executive functioning hypothesis

Aurélia Bugaiska; David Clarys; Caroline Jarry; Laurence Taconnat; Géraldine Tapia; Sandrine Vanneste; Michel Isingrini

This study was designed to investigate the effects of aging on consciousness in recognition memory, using the Remember/Know/Guess procedure (Gardiner, J. M., & Richarson-Klavehn, A. (2000). Remembering and Knowing. In E. Tulving & F. I. M. Craik (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Memory. Oxford University Press.). In recognition memory, older participants report fewer occasions on which recognition is accompanied by recollection of the original encoding context. Two main hypotheses were tested: the speed mediation hypothesis (Salthouse, T. A. (1996). The processing-speed theory of adult age differences in cognition. Psychological Review, 3, 403-428) and the executive-aging hypothesis (West, R. L. (1996). An application of prefrontal cortex function theory to cognitive aging. Psychological Bulletin, 120, 272-292). A group of young and a group of older adults took a recognition test in which they classified their responses according to Gardiner, J. M., & Richarson-Klavehn, A. (2000). Remembering and Knowing. In E. Tulving & F. I. M. Craik (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Memory. Oxford University Press. remember-know-guess paradigm. Subsequently, participants completed processing speed and executive function tests. The results showed that among the older participants, R responses decreased, but K responses did not. Moreover, a hierarchical regression analysis supported the view that the effect of age in recollection experience is determined by frontal lobe integrity and not by diminution of processing speed.


Aging Neuropsychology and Cognition | 2002

Relationships Between Age-Related Changes in Time Estimation and Age-Related Changes in Processing Speed, Attention, and Memory

Séverine Perbal; Sylvie Droit-Volet; Michel Isingrini; Viviane Pouthas

Younger and older participants performed a time reproduction task and a time production task in a counting and a concurrent reading condition. They were also administered a reaction time task and some memory tests. The results showed no difference between the two age groups in the counting condition. By contrast, in the concurrent reading condition, both age groups reproduced shorter durations and produced longer durations than the actual time, and both of these effects were significantly amplified with age. Moreover, processing speed was slower, and memory scores were poorer in the older than in the younger adults. Most importantly, the results revealed that age-related working memory limitations better accounted for the shorter reproductions with aging whereas age-related slower processing speed better accounted for the longer productions with aging.


Neuropsychologia | 2002

Alzheimer's disease and feeling-of-knowing in episodic memory.

Céline Souchay; Michel Isingrini; Roger Gil

Episodic memory feeling-of-knowing (FOK) was examined in 16 patients with Alzheimers disease (AD), 16 elderly participants, and 16 younger adults. Participants were given cued recall and recognition tests of 20 critical cue-target words. Subsequently, they judged their FOK for non-recalled words in terms of how likely they thought they would be to recognize the keywords on a subsequent recognition test. The results indicated dementia-related deficits on both the recall and recognition tests. Compared to older adults, AD patients exhibited impaired FOK accuracy. This pattern of outcome indicates that early AD is associated with a deficit in episodic memory and a deficit in memory monitoring for newly learned information. Furthermore, our observation revealed that in AD, episodic memory may be a more important factor than executive function in explaining the FOK inaccuracy.


Memory & Cognition | 1995

Dissociation of implicit and explicit memory tests: Effect of age and divided attention on category exemplar generation and cued recall

Michel Isingrini; Florence Vazou; Phillipe Leroy

In this article, we report an experiment that provides further evidence concerning the differences between explicit and implicit measures of memory. The effects of age and divided attention on the implicit conceptual test of category exemplar generation (CEG) were compared with their effects on the explicit test of cued recall, where the category names served as cues in both tasks. Four age groups (20–35, 40–55, 60–75, and 76–90) were compared. Half of the subjects were also required to carry out a secondary letter-detection task during the learning phase. Cued recall performance was significantly impaired by increased age and imposition of the secondary task. In contrast, the CEG task was unaffected by these two factors. These results suggest that implicit conceptual tasks and explicit memory tasks are mediated by different processes. This conclusion opposes those of previous studies that showed that experimental manipulations (level of processing, generation, organization) influenced these two kinds of memory tests in a similar way.


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 | 2006

Age-related changes in duration reproduction: Involvement of working memory processes

Alexia Baudouin; Sandrine Vanneste; Viviane Pouthas; Michel Isingrini

The aim of the present research was to study age-related changes in duration reproduction by differentiating the working memory processes underlying this time estimation task. We compared performances of young and elderly adults in a duration reproduction task performed in simple and concurrent task conditions. Participants were also administered working memory tests to measure storage and central executive functions. Findings indicated a differential involvement of working memory storage and central executive functions in age-related differences in temporal tasks. The limited storage capacities explained age-related changes in the simple task of duration reproduction, and the dysfunctioning of central executive functions accounted for age-related changes in duration reproduction performed in a concurrent task condition, which involves greater attentional resources.


International Journal of Aging & Human Development | 1997

Relation between fluid intelligence and frontal lobe functioning in older adults.

Michel Isingrini; Florence Vazou

This study reports the relations among normal aging, intelligence, and frontal lobe functioning. Intelligence tasks and frontal lobe functioning tasks were administered to 107 adults from two age groups (25 to 46 years and 70 to 99 years). Intelligence measures were assessed with two crystallized tests (WAIS Vocabulary and Information subtests), one fluid intelligence test (Cattells Matrices), and one mixed, crystallized and fluid test (WAIS Similarities subtest). Frontal functioning was assessed using the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) and two tests of verbal fluency. Significant age differences in favor of the young were found on the two intelligence tests with a fluid component and on all measures of frontal lobe functioning. Correlational analyses examining the relationship of intelligence measures to frontal variables indicated that these last measures were significantly correlated with only fluid intelligence tests in the elderly group. The implications for the relations among aging, fluid intelligence, and frontal lobe functioning are discussed.


Brain and Cognition | 2009

Executive functioning and processing speed in age-related differences in memory: contribution of a coding task.

Alexia Baudouin; David Clarys; Sandrine Vanneste; Michel Isingrini

The aim of the present study was to examine executive dysfunctioning and decreased processing speed as potential mediators of age-related differences in episodic memory. We compared the performances of young and elderly adults in a free-recall task. Participants were also given tests to measure executive functions and perceptual processing speed and a coding task (the Digit Symbol Substitution Test, DSST). More precisely, we tested the hypothesis that executive functions would mediate the age-related differences observed in the free-recall task better than perceptual speed. We also tested the assumption that a coding task, assumed to involve both executive processes and perceptual speed, would be the best mediator of age-related differences in memory. Findings first confirmed that the DSST combines executive processes and perceptual speed. Secondly, they showed that executive functions are a significant mediator of age-related differences in memory, and that DSST performance is the best predictor.


Experimental Aging Research | 2004

Executive Functioning and Judgment-of-Learning versus Feeling-of-Knowing in Older Adults

Céline Souchay; Michel Isingrini; David Clarys; Laurence Taconnat; Francis Eustache

Feeling-of-knowing (FOK) accuracy and judgment-of-learning (JOL) accuracy were compared on separate, identical, episodic-memory tasks. The results indicated that these two measures were not correlated, suggesting that they do not tap the same metacognitive ability. We also looked at whether FOK and JOL accuracies were related differently to higher order executive functioning. In order to take advantage of within-subject variability in cognitive performance, older adults were selected as participants. They were administered the standard neuropsychological tests used to assess executive functioning. A correlational analysis clearly showed that only FOK accuracy was correlated with the executive measures, suggesting that executive control is not equally implicated in FOK and JOL.

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Laurence Taconnat

François Rabelais University

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Séverine Fay

François Rabelais University

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Badiâa Bouazzaoui

François Rabelais University

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Lucie Angel

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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David Clarys

François Rabelais University

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Roger Gil

University of Poitiers

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Mathilde Sacher

François Rabelais University

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