Submission 205
A Bifactor Modeling Approach to Individual Differences in Prospective Memory Processes
SymposiumTalk-04
Presented by: Wiebke Hemming
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.