Age and gender-related differences in a spatial memory task in humans

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Author
León, Irene
Cimadevilla, José Manuel
Tascón, Laura
Publisher
ElsevierDate
2016Subject
Virtual realityDimorphism
Hippocampus
Sex differences
Aging
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Show full item recordAbstract
Cognitive skills decline with age. Our ability to keep oriented in our surrounding environment was demonstrated
to be influenced by factors like age and gender. Introduction of virtual reality based tasks improved
assessment of spatial memory in humans. In this study, spatial orientation was assessed in a virtual memory
task in order to determine the effect of aging and gender on navigational skills. Subjects from 45 to
74 years of age were organized in three groups (45–54, 55–64, 65–74 years old). Two levels of difficulty
were considered. Results showed that males outperformed females in 65–74 years-old group. In addition
to this, females showed a more noticeable poor performance in spatial memory than males, since
memory differences appeared between all age groups. On the other hand, 65–74 year-old males showed
an impaired performance in comparison with 45–54 year-old group. These results support that spatial
memory becomes less accurate as we age and gender is an important factor influencing spatial orientation skills.