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  2. Talk 3: Cognitive Connections: The Influence of Prior Knowledge in Everyday Memory - Ageing Well Public Talks Series 2024/25

Talk 3: Cognitive Connections: The Influence of Prior Knowledge in Everyday Memory - Ageing Well Public Talks Series 2024/25

Dates
Wednesday, November 13, 2024 - 11:00 to 13:00
Location
Online - Zoom or Stadium

Join us for a session on memory, part of the Ageing Well Public Talks series 2024/2025The Open University and Ageing Well Public Talks Logos

In our day-to-day lives, we intuitively link new experiences with our existing knowledge, enhancing memory retention and recall. In this talk, Dorothy will explore how novelty and prior knowledge impact memory processing.

 

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Watch a live stream of the meeting via Stadium

 

The speakers

Dr Dorothy Tse - is a senior lecturer in the Department of Psychology at Edge Hill University, UK, and an honorary fellow at Edinburgh Neuroscience, University of Edinburgh. Dorothy’s passion and expertise lie in the neurobiology of learning and memory, early detection of dementia, and promoting healthy ageing. 

 

About the series

In the 'Ageing Well Public Talk series' we are exploring how important it is, over our lifespan, to maintain well-balanced nutrition and hydration as well as regular physical and social activity in older age, also known as the 'Five Pillars of Ageing Well'. Ageing demonstrates most significantly when we reach a certain age, the usual benchmark being 65+, but ageing starts much sooner and the way ageing demonstrates when we are over 65 depends on decisions we have been making over our life span.

The series and related materials such as ‘The Five Pillars of Ageing Well’ became the cornerstones of further engagement with the public, specifically around COVID-19 and the relating self-isolation, which are now available on the OU website and the Internet.

The overall aim of these series of interventions is to facilitate a step change in user behaviour and support service provision. Self-management and becoming partner in our own health care is an important aspect of these talks. This may have a wider impact in healthcare economies, as ageing and related co-morbidities have a substantial health and economic burden footprint.

AWPTS is a highly adaptable tool for addressing also the needs of diverse groups requiring tailored interventions, for instance, heart failure and diabetes, where prevention and sustained self-management are crucial for improving quality of life. Since 2019, over 25,000 members of the public have engaged with the talks nationally, and the AWPTS portfolio of resources has engaged over 90,000 people globally; our regular feedback confirms that this intervention has increased knowledge of age-related processes, attitudes to health and wellbeing, confidence in self-management and lifestyle choices for healthy ageing among the public as well as practitioners, professionals, and clinicians who support ageing populations in their professional roles.

 

This event will be held on Zoom and live streamed to Stadium. The organiser will contact you with instructions on how to access the event.

For more information about the event or if you have any queries, please email WELS Research Events

All talks last between 60-90 min.

 

Event category: 
Ageing WellHWSC