16:30 - 18:00
Parallel sessions 6
16:30 - 18:00
Room: HSZ - N5
Chair/s:
Wiebke Hemming, Fabian E. Gümüsdagli
Prospective memory (PM) refers to the ability to remember intended actions and execute them at a specific time point (time-based PM) or in response to a specific event (event-based PM) in the future (for an overview, see Bayen et al., 2024). PM is pivotal for goal-directed behavior in everyday life, and everyday errors frequently involve PM failures (Crovitz & Daniel, 1984; Kvavilashvili et al., 2001; Terry, 1988). Over the past decades, PM research has evolved into a broad field encompassing laboratory paradigms, naturalistic studies, neurophysiological studies and metacognitive and cognitive modeling approaches. Despite this progress, many of the key questions remain unanswered about the mechanisms supporting PM across different contexts, time frames, and age groups. 
This symposium brings together recent advances from diverse domains of PM research. The first talk focuses on the functional neuroanatomy of event-based and time-based PM in healthy older adults. The second talk examines age differences in metacognitive monitoring and control processes in PM, focusing on how these mechanisms support the management of intentions across adulthood. The third talk focuses on a metacognitive path model of time-based PM, tested empirically on multiple datasets. The fourth talk introduces a novel bi-factor modeling approach that separates bottom-up spontaneous retrieval from top-down preparatory processes in event-based PM. Finally, the fifth talk introduces a new cognitive model that disentangles the prospective component—remembering that something must be done—and the retrospective components of event-based PM, namely remembering what must be done and when. Together, this symposium provides an integrative perspective on current theoretical and methodological developments in PM research and concludes with a discussion of challenges in measuring PM performance and promising directions for future work.
Submission 205
A Bifactor Modeling Approach to Individual Differences in Prospective Memory Processes
SymposiumTalk-04
Presented by: Wiebke Hemming
Wiebke HemmingKathrin SadusJan Rummel
Heidelberg University, Germany
Event-based prospective memory (PM) is the ability to remember to execute an intended action in response to an external cue. According to the Dynamic Multi-Process Theory, successful PM performance involves two cognitive processes interacting in a dynamic fashion: top-down monitoring and bottom-up spontaneous retrieval. In this study (N = 175), we investigated individual differences in PM performance using a bifactor modeling approach to separate top-down and bottom-up PM processes. We further measured attentional control and fluid intelligence as underlying factors of PM. Participants completed a 2-back task with PM targets that were either focal, reflecting both bottom-up spontaneous retrieval processes and top-down monitoring, or non-focal, reflecting top-down monitoring processes. The target focality effect was replicated, showing better a PM performance and faster response times in the focal condition compared to the non-focal condition. Structural equation modeling confirmed separate PM factors for top-down monitoring and bottom-up spontaneous retrieval that contribute differently to focal and non-focal PM. Top-down PM was correlated with attentional control, while bottom-up PM was not. Fluid intelligence was only marginally related to top-down PM, and this effect was fully mediated by attentional control. The findings suggest that individual differences in PM performance are best understood by separating the underlying cognitive mechanisms.