POSTER SESSION 1 Friday, April 15, 11:00-12:30 Training 1. The more the better? A meta-analysis on effects of combined cognitive and physical intervention on cognition in healthy older adults. Xinyi Zhu, Shufei Yin, Minjia Lang, Jianhua Hou, Juan Li, Center for Ageing Psychology, Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences 2. Training for generalization in Theory of Mind in normal aging. Bottiroli Sara, National Neurological Institute C. Mondino, Pavia, Italy, Lecce Serena, Bianco Federica, Rosi Alessia, Vecchi Tomaso, Cavallini Elena, Brain and Behavioural Sciences Department, University of Pavia, Italy. 3. Well Being as a Moderator of Response to a Memory Intervention in Community Living Seniors. Graham J. McDougall Jr., Joshua C. Eyer, Marietta P. Stanton, University of Alabama. 4. Strategy-adaptation Training: the influence of individual differences on training benefits. Elena Cavallini, Brain and Behavioural Sciences Department, University of Pavia, Italy, Sara Bottiroli, Headache Science Centre, National Neurological Institute C. Mondino, Pavia, John Dunlosky, Kent State University, Christopher Hertzog, Georgia Institute of Technology. 5. The Impact of Cognitive Training on Brain Electrophysiology and Divided Attention in Healthy Older Adults. Al-Yawer, F., Phillips, N., Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, DeBoysson, C., Mellah, S., Belleville, S., Department of Psychology, University of Montreal, Montreal, Canada. 6. Training the Aging Brain with Mental and Physical Exercise. Lixia Yang, Ryerson University, Canada, Benjamin J. Dyson, University of Sussex, UK, Sara N. Gallant, Andrea Wilkinson, Leanne Wilkins, Khushi Patel, Ryerson University, Canada. 7. Plasticity of Inhibition in Older Adults: Practice, Transfer, and Long-term Maintenance. Andrea Wilkinson, Lixia Yang, Ryerson University, Canada. 8. Feedback training for response time consistency reduces ex-Gaussian tau in younger and older adults. Brandon P. Vasquez, Nicole D. Anderson, Department of Psychology, University of Toronto. 9. The Effects of Combination tDCS and Speed of Processing Training on Simulated Driving Behavior in Older HIV-positive Adults. Caitlin Northcutt Pope, Despina Stavrinos, Tyler Reed Bell, and Pariya L. Fazeli, University of Alabama at Birmingham. 10. Training Elderly in Pedestrian Safety: Transfer Effect Between Two Virtual Reality Simulation Devices. Pauline Maillot, Paris Descartes University, Sorbonne Paris, Aurélie Dommes, Nguyen-Thong Dang, Fabrice Vienne, The French Institute of Science and Technology for Transport, Development and Networks, Versailles, France. Metacognition 11. Information Overload and Aging: When Do Older Adults Choose to Stop Encoding? Adam B. Blake, Tyson K. Kerr, University of California, Los Angeles, Kou Murayama, University of Reading, Alan D. Castel, University of California, Los Angeles. 12. The Knowledge of Memory Aging Questionnaire: Factor Structure and Correlates in a Lifespan Sample. Celinda Reese-Melancon, Oklahoma State University, Katie E. Cherry, Karri S. Hawley, Louisiana State University, S. Michal Jazwinski, Tulane University School of Medicine. 13. Older Adults are Neutral about their Ability to Predict the Effect of Emotional Valence on Memory. Ethan Flurry, Deborah K. Eakin, Mississippi State University. 14. Does stereotype threat contribute to older adults’ avoidance of memory strategies? Fizah Zafar, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Pascal Huguet, Isabelle Régner, Aix-Marseille University and CNRS, Dayna R. Touron, University of North Carolina at Greensboro. 15. Change in Episodic Memory Performance over Time Predicts Subsequent Perceptions of Memory Decline. Gizem Hueluer, Humboldt University, Berlin, Christopher Hertzog, Ann M. Pearman, Georgia Institute of Technology, Denis Gerstorf, Humboldt University, Berlin. 16. Older Adults' Perceptions of Memory Aid Use and Meta-Memory Accuracy: A Focus Group Study. Jessica Crumley-Branyon, Richard Pak, Clemson University. 17. Metaforgetting: Predicting Forgetting of Emotional Information Across the Lifespan. Sara N. Gallant, Lixia Yang, Ryerson University. 18. Knowledge of Aging is Related to Fear of Aging. Arlo Clark-Foos, Christopher Urbanik, University of Michigan Dearborn, M. Cherie Clark, Queens University. 19. Examining the effects of control beliefs on older adults’ cognitive fatigue. Brian T Smith, North Carolina State Universitiy. Social Cognition 20. The stability of age differences in valence effects. Anjali Thapar, Lindsey Deverm, Devon Dautrich, Bryn Mawr College. 21. Diffusion Model Analysis of Age Group Effects on Implicit Self-Esteem. Bartosz Gula, Rainer Alexandrowicz, University of Klagenfurt, Austria. 22. Cognitive and Social Factors Related to Fraud Victimization in Older Adults. Rebecca Judges, University of Toronto, Sara Gallant, Lixia Yang, Ryerson University, Kang Lee, Ryerson University. 23. Age differences in judgments of attractiveness, likeability, and trustworthiness of faces. Diana S. Cortes, Petri Laukka, Håkan Fischer, Stockholms University. 24. Self-compassion is associated with social connection and support in older adults. Stephen P. M. Barney, Dimitri G. Macris, Angelina J. Polsinelli, Elizabeth L. Glisky, University of Arizona. 25. More than meets the eye: Eye-tracking analyses of gaze patterns related to stereotypical processing of older faces. Jane Berry, University of Richmond. Cognitive Impairment 26. Prospective memory in older adults with Mild Cognitive Impairment: Is automatic retrieval more disproportionately impaired? Agnieszka Niedzwienska, Lia Kvavilashvili, University of Hertfordshire. 27. How to Quickly and Sensitively Detect Mild Cognitive Impairment in Parkinson’s Disease. Alana Enslein, Lise Abrams, Ronald Cohen, Adam Woods, University of Florida. 28. Using multi-level, spatial data to link neighborhood factors to cognition among sociodemographically at-risk older adults. Atif Adam, Vijay R. Varma, Michelle Carlson, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. 29. Exploring Rumination in Older Adults with and without early signs of dementia. Brian Stran, RaLynn Schmalzried, Washburn University. 30. Does Television Watching Activity Predict Mild Cognitive Impairment in Older Adults? Cassandra R. Hatt, Allison A. M. Bielak, Colorado State University. 31. Physical activity, memory loss, and receipt of care: Associations among middle-age and older adults. Christina E. Miyawaki, University of Houston, Erin D. Bouldin, VA Puget Sound HSR&D, Gayathri S. Kumar, National Centers for Chronic Disease Prevention and Control, Lisa C. McGuire, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 32. CDC’s Healthy Brain Initiative: The National Public Health Road Map to Maintaining Cognitive Health. Lisa C. McGuire, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 33. Changes in Resting State Functional Connectivity in MCI and Healthy Elders After a 12-Week Exercise Intervention. J. Carson Smith, Theresa J. Smith, Lauren R. Weiss, Alfonso J. Alfini, University of Maryland, Katherine Reiter, Kristy A. Nielson, Marquette University. 34. Pattern Separation in Aging and Dementia: Behavioral Performance and Biomarkers of Preclinical Impairment. Katherine Ingram, David Salmon, Douglas Galasko, John Wixted, University of California, San Diego. 35. Picture Naming Errors Across the Continuum of Cognitive Impairment. L. Kathleen Oliver, Devora Goldberg, Karin R. Humphreys, McMaster University. 36. Effects of simultaneous aerobic and cognitive training on executive functions, cardiovascular fitness and functional abilities in older adults with mild cognitive impairment. Laure Combourieu, Alexandra Perrot, University of Paris Sud, Frederic Bloch, University of Paris Descartes, Gilles Kemoun, University de Poitiers. 37. Caregiver Perceptions of Behavior Changes in the Initial Stages of Alzheimer’s Disease. Laurene Saad-Youni, Michigan School of Professional Psychology. 38. Modeling The Evolution of Intimacy in Alzheimer's Disease: The Patient Perspective. William J. Puentes, University of North Carolina at Pembroke, Sean N. Halpin, Rebecca L. Dillard, Emory University. 39. Involuntary autobiographical memories in older adults with Mild Cognitive Impairment. Agnieszka Niedzwienska, Lia Kvavilashvili, University of Hertfordshire. 40. Learning and memory in Mild Cognitive Impairment. Dezso Nemeth, Karolina Janacsek, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest and Eotvos Lorand University. 41. Rate of cognitive change in older adults. Rhoda Au, Boston University, Michelle Carlson, Josef Coresh, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Paul K. Crane, University of Washington, Dan Mungas, University of California, Davis, Heather R. Romero, Notre Dame University, A. Richey Sharrett, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Richard N. Jones, Brown University. 42. Age-related Variability in Motor Performance is due to Changes in Peripheral Motor Processing rather than Centralized Cognitive Decline. Seline Ozer, David Bunce, Aimee Halstead, Shazma Mahmood, Fiona Donachie, Melanie Burke, University of Leeds Episodic Memory 43. Electrophysiological correlates of episodic memory throughout the lifespan: involvement of executive functioning. Alibran Emilie, Angel Lucie, Bouazzaoui Badia, Gomot Marie, Froger Charlotte, Isingrini Michel, University de Tours. 44. Cross-Cultural Differences in Memory with Age. Angela Gutchess, Brandeis University, Aysecan Boduroglu, Bogazici University. 45. What kind of resource supports episodic encoding? An age-group comparison. Arnaud Boujut, David Clarys, CeRCA, University of Poitiers. 46. Recall-to-reject: Aging effects on the neural correlates of recollection rejection. Caitlin R. Bowman, University of Oregon, Nancy A. Dennis, Pennsylvania State University. 47. Age-related changes in the role of perceptual overlap in false memories. Indira C. Turney, Kyle A. Kurkela, Nancy A. Dennis, Pennsylvania State University 48. When the mind wanders: Distinguishing stimulus-dependent from stimulus-independent thoughts in young and older adults. David Maillet, Daniel L. Schacter, Harvard University. 49. Longitudinal relationship between sleep duration and cognitive performance. H. Kim, R. Toomey, Boston University, C. Franz, University of California, San Diego, R. McKenzie, Boston University. 50. The Role of Schematic Support in Age-Related Associative Deficits in Short-Term and Long-Term Memory. Dwight J. Peterson, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin, University of Missouri. 51. Hooked on Memory: A Method of Loci Training Program for Older and Younger Adults. Mark J. Huff, Robert Woody, Washington University in St. Louis, Mary Pyc, Dart Neuroscience, David A. Balota, Washington University in St. Louis. 52. The Attentional Boost Effect for Words in Young and Older Adults. Matthew W. Prull, Whitman College. 53. Content-specific age-related effects on recollection and familiarity. Patricia Marshall, Morgan D. Barense, Nicole D. Anderson, University of Toronto. Physical Activity 54. Lifestyle influences on cognition across the adult lifespan. Irene Lopez Fontana, Alexandra Perrot, Carole Castanier, Christine Le Scanff, University of Paris, Sud. 55. Cycling as a Way to Improve Cognitive Function and Wellbeing in Older Adults. Louise-Ann Leyland, University of Reading, Benedict Spencer, Nick Beale, Tim Jones, Oxford Brookes University, Carien M. van Reekum, University of Reading. 56. Everyday physical activity and mobility affect executive function level and change for older adults: Age effects within APOE risk-allele status. Sherilyn Thibeau, G. Peggy McFall, Roger A. Dixon, University of Alberta. 57. Hippocampal sub-regional shape and physical activity in older adults. William J. Puentes, University of North Carolina at Pembroke, Sean N. Halpin, Rebecca L. Dillard, Emory University School of Medicine. 58. Spatial navigation training in older adults during 14-days of physical inactivity. Uros Marusic, University of Primorska, Koper, Slovenia, Bruno Giordani, University of Michigan, Scott Moffat, Georgia Institute of Technology. 59. Do Daily Activities Covary with Daily Cognitive Performance? Allison A. M. Bielak, Colorado State University, Jacqueline Mogle, Martin Sliwinski, Pennsylvania State University. 60. Emotional Word Choice during a Cycling Dual Task in Older Adults and People with Parkinson’s Disease. Sara A. Horne, Lori J. P. Altmann, University of Florida, Elizabeth Stegemoller, University of Iowa, Chris J. Hass, University of Florida. 61. Hippocampal sub-regional shape and physical activity in older adults. Vijay R Varma, Johns Hopkins University. Xiaoying Tang, SYSU-CMU Joint Institute of Engineering, Michelle C. Carlson, Johns Hopkins University. POSTER SESSION 2 Friday, April 15, 4:00 – 6:00 Neuroscience 1. What predicts cognitive decline over 3.5 Years in healthy adults? Age or Amyloid? Michelle E. Farrell, Xi Chen, Sara B. Festini, Denise C. Park, University of Texas at Dallas. 2. Mnemonic discrimination relates to hippocampal tract integrity in the oldest-old. Ilana J. Bennett, Shauna M. Stark, Dana E. Greenia, Maria M. Corrada, Claudia H. Kawas, Craig E.L. Stark, University of California, Irvine. 3. Effects of errors on memory performance and brain activity in healthy younger and older adults. Amanda Lash, Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest, Andrée-Ann Cyr, Glendon College at York University, Fergus Craik, Cheryl Grady, Nicole D. Anderson, Rotman Research Institute, University of Toronto. 4. Event-related brain potentials reveal age-related changes in the recruitment of parafoveal visual attention in reading. Brennan R Payne, Kara D Federmeier, University of Illinois. 5. Associations of oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) single-nucleotid polymorphisms with cognition, socioemotional functioning, and brain volumes in the Berlin Aging Study II. Natalie Ebner, Ian Frazier, University of Florida, Sandra Duezel, Max Planck Institute, Berlin, Lars Bertram, Imperial College, London, Simone Kuehn, Max Planck Institute, Berlin, Denis Gerstorf, Humboldt University of Berlin, Tian Liu, Ulman Lindenberger, Max Planck Institute, Berlin 6. Exploring the efficacy of non-invasive brain stimulation in elevating mood in older adults: the role of cardiovascular risk factors and baseline depression scores. Carys Evans, Michael Banissy, Rebecca A. Charlton, Goldsmiths, University of London. 7. Alzheimer’s disease biomarker levels in cognitively normal individuals are associated with computerized cognitive tasks 10 years later. Corinne Pettigrew, Anja Soldan, Abhay Moghekar, Marilyn Albert, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. 8. Frontoparietal Activation during Visual Conjunction Search: Effects of Bottom-up Guidance and Adult Age. David J. Madden, Emily L. Parks, Catherine W. Tallman, Maria A. Boylan, David A. Hoagey, Sally B. Cocjin, Micah A. Johnson, Ying-hui Chou, Nan-kuei Chen, Guy G. Potter, Duke University Medical Center, Michele T. Diaz, Pennsylvania State University. 9. Premature return to normal activity following mild traumatic brain injuries throughout the lifetime of healthy college students. Emma Gootee, Kyle Vynorius, Daniel Seichepine, University of New Hampshire. 10. Age-related decreases in modulation of neural activity during difficult visuo-spatial judgments. Jenny R. Rieck, Maria A. Boylan, Karen M. Rodrigue, Kristen M. Kennedy, University of Texas at Dallas. 11. Exploring the Effects of Age, Working Memory, and Lifestyle on Default Mode Network Activity Using Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS). Jessica Katschke, Scott Wittman, Nicolette Benderoth, Karen Daniels, Jeffrey Toth, University of North Carolina at Wilmington. 12. Tumor Necrosis Factor- alpha (TNF-α) and cognitive function in older adults. Lindsey A. Richards, Adam J. Woods, Nicole R Nissim, Taylor LeCorgne, The Institute on Aging- Cognitive Aging and Memory Lab. 13. Neural correlates of prospective memory across the lifespan: The influence of associative and strategic processes. Alexandra Hering, University of Geneva, Yee Lee Shing, University of Stirling, Surama Selig, Matthias Kliegel, University of Geneva. Health 14. Cross-sectional evidence for discontinuity of age relations between young-old and old-old age. Andreas Ihle, University of Geneva, Daniela S. Jopp, University of Lausanne, Michel Oris, Delphine Fagot, Matthias Kliegel, University of Geneva. 15. Now or Never: The Effect of Future Perspective on Healthy Lifestyle Choices in Younger and Older Adults. Carla M. Strickland-Hughes, Aylin Tasdemir-Ozdes, Susan Bluck, Natalie C. Ebner, University of Florida. 16. Cognitive Reserve and Brain Maintenance: two orthogonal concepts. Christian Habeck, Columbia University, Jason Steffener, Concordia University, Ray Razlighi, Yaakov Stern, Columbia University. 17. The relationship of glucose metabolism to cognition in non-diabetic older adults. Gilda Ennis, Ursula Saelzler, Georgia Institute of Technology, Guillermo Umpierrez, Emory University, Scott Moffat, Georgia Institute of Technology. 18. Responding to health risk: a qualitative analysis of conversations about health following risk assessment. Jason Martin, Elisabeth Beardall, Jennifer Hunter, Alyson Luckenbach, Kathleen Welch, University of Missouri, Kansas City, Margaret Hansen, Susan Kemper, University of Kansas, Joan McDowd, University of Missouri, Kansas City. 19. Emotion, arousal, and coping styles in processing health information. Mark Poirier, Diane Filion, University of Missouri, Kansas City, Susan Kemper, University of Kansas, Kym Bennett, Billy Murphy, Cassandra Marshall, Jacob Angier, Elisabeth Beardall, Tanya Kelly, Joan McDowd, University of Missouri, Kansas City. 20. Age Differences in Discounting of Time, Probability, and Effort Across Monetary, Social, and Health Domains. Kendra L. Seaman, Marissa A. Gorlick, Catherine A.C. Holland, Yale University, Ming Hsu, University of California Berkeley, David H. Zald, Vanderbilt University, Gregory R. Samanez-Larkin, Yale University. 21. Longitudinal cortisol levels and cognitive functioning. Ursula Saelzler, Georgia Institute of Technology, Sue Resnick, National Institute on Aging, Scott Moffat, Georgia Institute of Technology. Attention and Executive Function 22. Monitoring in Laboratory and Real-World Tasks. Allen Nida, Amanda Clark, Jill Shelton, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. 23. Hand Tremors Predict Older Adults' Ability to Tolerate Visual Noise in Perceptual and Attention tasks. Wythe Whiting, Emily Streeper, Molly Ungrady, Washington and Lee University 24. Effect of Social Network on Older Adult’s Cognitive Function after Relocation. Renee DeCaro, Ayanna K. Thomas, Heather L. Urry, Holly A. Taylor, Tufts University. 25. When Task Switching Older Adults Switch Well but Juggle Poorly. Jacquelyn Berry, State University of New York, New Paltz. 26. Conflict adaptation in healthy aging. Andrew J. Aschenbrenner, David A. Balota, Washington University in St. Louis. 27. Age-based differences in neural networks supporting response-conflict congruency and switchcosts in a task-switching paradigm. Teal Eich, Yaakov Stern, Columbia University Medical Center. 28. Physical fitness training and task-set cost in older adults. Tudor Vrinceanu, Melanie Renaud, Louis Bherer, University of Montreal. 29. Presence of autistic traits affects executive function and mood in a sample of older adults. Rebecca A Charlton, Jessica Budgett, Goldsmiths University of London, Melissa Lamar, Aifeng Zhang, Xinguo Ren, Olusola Ajilore, Ghanshyam N. Pandey, Anand Kumar, University of Illinois at Chicago. 30. The Effect of Reducing the Attended Task Load in a Dichotic Listening Task among Younger and Older Adults. Sanchita Gargya, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin, Matt Brubaker, University of Missouri. 31. Aging and Attentional Flexibility in Visual Change Detection. Maria J. Donaldson, Cleveland State University, Naohide Yamamoto, Queensland University of Technology, Eric S. Allard, Cleveland State University. 32. Strategic Flexibility as a Mechanism of Cognitive Reserve. Daniel Barulli, Yaakov Stern, Columbia University. 33. Does Stereotype Threat Promote Mind-Wandering in Older Adults? Megan L. Jordano, Dayna R. Touron, University of North Carolina at Greensboro. 34. Optimizing Visual Attention in Old Age: The Beneficial Effect of a Partner Hand Massage. Pavel Kozik, James T. Enns, Christiane Hoppmann, University of British Columbia. 35. The Flexibility of Cognitive Control: Examining Age-Differences when Experience is behind the Wheel. Emily R. Cohen-Shikora, Nathaniel T. Diede, Chelsea S. Birchmier, Julie M. Bugg, Washington University in St. Louis. 36. Age differences in visual search on everyday environment under time pressure. Satoru Suto, Shizuoka University, Kosuke Suzuki, Etsuko T. Harada, Tsukuba University. 37. Do Variations in Control Affect Mind Wandering in Young and Old Age Groups? Nathaniel T. Diede, Washington University in St. Louis, Alexandra Raymond-Schmidt, Hendrix College, Julie M. Bugg, Washington University in St. Louis. 38. Age-related Differences in Frequency and Content of Mind-Wandering: Implications for Attentional Control. Patrick Whitmoyer, Nicole Puccetti, Stephanie Fountain-Zaragoza, Allison Londeree, Ruchika Shaurya Prakash, Ohio State University. 39. Age-related differences in task-set inhibition as a function of proactive and reactive control. Kiran K Vadaga, Steve Desbiens, Karen Z.H. Li, Concordia University. 40. The Effects of Mood Inductions on Proactive and Reactive Control. Linda Truong, Lixia Yang, Ryerson University. 41. The Impact of Domain-Specific Tasks on Motor Costs in Younger and Older Adults. Meagan Suen, Young-Hee Cho, Vennila Krishnan, Olfat Mohammed, California State University, Long Beach. 42. An index of cognitive frailty is associated with increased risk for dementia independent of executive function. Michelle C. Carlson, Ryan M. Andrews, Vijay R. Varma, Judith Kasper, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. 43. An index of cognitive frailty on the Stroop task is associated with poor physical function independent of executive function. Ryan M. Andrews, Judith Kasper, Qian-Li Xue, Vijay Varma, Michelle C. Carlson, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. 44. Dispositional mindfulness is higher among older compared to younger adults. Christina Boudreau, Saphire Miramontes, Sara Feld, Angelina Polsinelli, Elizabeth L. Glisky, University of Arizona. 45. Examining neighborhood effects in game-based passwords in older adults. Samantha E. Tuft, Sara Incera, Conor T. McLennan, Philip Manning, Cleveland State University. Parkinson’s Disease 46. Effect of Tremor Symptoms on Anxiety Scores in Parkinson’s Disease. Asher Le, Robert Salazar, Alice Cronin-Golomb, Boston University. 47. Deep Brain Stimulation in Parkinson’s disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Christina Martin, Colleen Pappas, Brent Small, University of South Florida. 48. Spatial bias in Parkinson’s disease and normal aging: Effects of a dynamic stimulus on perceived center. Kathryn Moon, Sandy Neargarder, Alice Cronin-Golomb, Boston University. 49. Dual-Task Performance as an Objective Correlate of Subjective Cognitive and Neuropsychiatric Functioning in Parkinson’s Disease. Olivier J. Barthelemy, Emma Weizenbaum, Sandy Neargarder, Alice Cronin-Golomb, Boston University. 50. Dual Task Cycling Impacts Emotional Word Choice in Older Adults and People with Parkinson’s Disease. Sara A. Horne, Lori J. P. Altmann, University of Florida, Elizabeth Stegemoller, University of Iowa, Chris J. Hass, University of Florida. Decision Making, Complex Cognition, and Creativity 51. Age-related changes in everyday competences: the role of fluid and crystallized abilities. Alessandra Cantarella, Erika Borella, University of Padua, Paolo Ghisletta, Emilie Jolie, University of Geneva, Fedeerica Piras. IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation, Debora Coraluppi, Elena Carbone, Rossana De Beni, University of Padua. 52. Age-related differences in social decision-making: The impact of social partner features on decision-making. Alessia Rosi, Marta Nola, University of Pavia, Shannon McGillivray, University of Essex, Serena Lecce, University of Pavia. 53. Age differences in the use of descriptive and experiential information in decision-making. Erica A. Lee, Claire M. Growney, Thomas M. Hess, North Carolina State University. 54. Age, Priming, Working Memory, & Personality: A Study of Decision Making. Meagan M. Wood, Shelia Black, University of Alabama. 55. When Wrinkles Disappear with Age: Temporal Value Asymmetry and Aging. Alexander L.M. Siegel, Mary B. Hargis, Shannon McGillivray, Aimee Drolet, Alan D. Castel, University of California, Los Angeles. 56. Is Age Really Cruel to Experts: Compensatory Effects of Activity. Nemanja Vaci, Bartosz Gula, Merim Bilalić, Alpen-Adria University, Klagenfurt, Austria. 57. Aging and Altruism in Intertemporal Choice. Sparrow, Erika, Spaniol, Julia, Ryerson University. 58. Age differences in the subjective valuation of technology. Ryan Best, Florida State University. 59. Type I vs. Type II Reasoning in Older Adults. Marit Smith, Christopher Hertzog, Georgia Institute of Technology, Robert Ariel, Purdue University. 60. An episodic specificity induction enhances divergent creative thinking in young and older adults. Kevin P. Madore, Helen G. Jing, Daniel L. Schacter, Harvard University POSTER SESSION 3 Saturday, April 16, 11:00 – 12:30 Neuroscience 1. Age-related white matter integrity differences in the oldest-old. Ilana J. Bennett, Dana E. Greenia, Shauna M. Stark, University of California, Irvine, Pauline Maillard, University of California, Davis, Maria M. Corrada, Craig E.L. Stark, University of California, Irvine, Charles DeCarli, University of California, Davis, Claudia H. Kawas, University of California, Irvine. 2. Future oriented cognitions and behaviors following stroke. Amanda D. Lyons, Julie D. Henry, The University of Queensland, Peter G. Rendell, Australian Catholic University, Gail A. Robinson, Thomas Suddendorf, University of Queensland. 3. Prestimulus Subsequent Memory Effects in the Young and Old: A Time Frequency Analysis. Jon Strunk, Audrey Duarte, Georgia Institute of Technology. 4. Neural Dynamics During Memory Encoding Provide a Biomarker of Successful Aging. M. Karl Healey, Michael J. Kahana, University of Pennsylvania. 5. Neural response to working memory load in healthy aging: Frontal modulation supports performance in middle-aged and older adults. Maria A. Boylan, Jenny R. Rieck, Karen M. Rodrigue, Kristen M. Kennedy, University of Texas at Dallas. 6. Age-related changes in neural-vascular coupling vary with task demand: a combined fMRIEEG investigation. Monroe Turner, Lyndahl Himes, Joanna Hutchison, University of Texas at Dallas, Hanzhang Lu, Johns Hopkins University, Bart Rypma, University of Texas at Dallas. 7. Oxytocin's Effect on Resting-State Functional Connectivity Varies by Age and Sex. Natalie C. Ebner, Huaihou Chen, Eric Porges, Tian Lin, University of Florida, Håkan Fischer, Stockholm University, David Feifel, University of California, San Diego, Ronald A. Cohen, University of Florida. 8. Executive function is associated with emotional control in the ageing brain. Carien M. van Reekum, University of Reading. 9. Neural Correlates of Working Memory in Older Adults. Nicole R. Nissim, Andrew O'Shea, Vaughn Bryant, Eric Porges, Ronald Cohen, Adam J. Woods, University of Florida. 10. Gray-Matter Volume Correlates of Associative Memory in Older and Younger Adults. Nina Becker, Erika J. Laukka, Grégoria Kalpouzos, Stockholm University, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin, University of Missouri, Lars Bäckman, Yvonne Brehmer, Stockholm University. 11. Diffusion Segmentation (DSEG) Provides a Whole-Brain Metric of Structural Decline in Cerebral Small Vessel Disease related to Change in Cognition over Three-Years. Owen A Williams, Eva Zeestraten, St. George’s University of London, Andrew J Lawrence, Cambridge University, Philip Benjamin, Christian Lambert, St. George’s University of London, Robin Morris, Kings College London, Rebecca A Charlton, Goldsmiths University of London, Hugh S Markus, Cambridge University, Thomas R Barrick, St. George’s University of London. 12. Associations between latent cognitive abilities, speed of processing, reasoning, memory and vocabulary and cortical thickness across the lifespan. Qolamreza Razlighi, Christian Habeck, Yaakov Stern, Columbia University Medical Center. Working Memory 13. Improving Spatial Working Memory in Younger and Older Adults: Effects of Crossmodal Cues. Ashley F. Curtis, Norm W. Park, Gary R. Turner, Susan J. E. Murtha, York University. 14. The Role of Aging in Intra-Item and Item-Context Binding Processes in Visual Working Memory. Dwight J. Peterson, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin, University of Missouri. 15. Cognitive Deficits Related to Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Middle-Aged and Older Adults. Ei Hlaing, Siena College, Steaphanie Clancy Dollinger, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Terry Brown, St. Joseph Memorial Hospital. 16. Effects of tapping devices and working memory component of older adults on single tapping. Kazunori Otsuka, University of Nagasaki. 17. Overt and Covert Visuospatial Rehearsal in Young and Older Adults. Lindsey Lilienthal, Penn State – Altoona, Sandra Hale, Richard A. Abrams, Joel Myerson, Washington University in St. Louis. 18. Cognitive impact of rumination and cognitive impact in caregivers. RaLynn Schmalzried, Brian Stran, Washburn University. 19. Age-Related Differences in Conflict Adaptation Are Specific to Trials Following Congruent Stimuli for Both Working Memory and External Stroop Tasks. Mark E. Faust, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Kristi S. Multhaup, Mary S. Manning, Davidson College. 20. Can Semantic Memory Support Alleviate the Associative Deficit in Older Adults’ ShortTerm/Working Memory? Matthew S. Brubaker, Springfield College, Moshe NavehBenjamin, University of Missouri. 21. Spatial organization differentially impacts younger and older adults’ VSWM. Ruizhi Dai, Ayanna K. Thomas, Holly A. Taylor, Tufts University. 22. Spatial Retrospective Attention Enhances Visual Working Memory in the Young and Old. Zurain Hassan, Amanda Gilchrist, Paul Verhaeghen, Audrey Duarte, Georgia Institute of Technology. 23. Dispositional mindfulness is associated with better working memory in older adults. Xunchang Fang, University of Hong Kong, Katie Huynh, Hannah Richie, Angelina J. Polsinelli, Elizabeth L. Glisky, University of Arizona. 24. Dispositional mindfulness is associated with fewer everyday cognitive failures in older adults. Jacqueline O. Marquez, Dimitri G. Macris, Angelina J. Polsinelli, Elizabeth L. Glisky, University of Arizona. 25. The Impact of Age-Related Hearing Loss on Cognition and Posture in a Dual-Task Paradigm. H. Bruce, G.Asare, N. St-Onge, K. Z. H. Li, Concordia University Emotion 26. The effect of expectation on emotional event memory in younger and older adults. Brittany Corbett, Lisa Weinberg, Audrey Duarte, Georgia Institute of Technology. Assigned to 2 sessions 27. Age-related differences in emotion-regulation strategies: Examining the role of contextual factors. Brittney Schirda, Thomas R. Valentine, Amelia Aldao, Ruchika S. Prakash, Ohio State University. 28. Age Differences in the Interpretation of Surprise Facial Expressions. Michael Shuster, Joseph Mikels, Linda Camras, DePaul University. 29. Age Differences in the Interpretation of Ambiguous Scenarios. Joseph A. Mikels, Michael M. Shuster, Depaul University. 30. Can Distractibility Facilitate Recall in Older Adults? The Role of Affect and Hyper-Binding. Cassandra Dinius, Stephanie Clancy Dollinger, Southern Illinois University. 31. Age Differences in Facial Emotion Recognition and Gaze Patterns in Koreans. Soo Rim Noh, Chungnam National University, South Korea, Yunju Nam, Upyong Hong, Konkuk University, South Korea, Derek Isaacowitz, Northeastern University. 32. Aging and Emotion Recognition: An Examination of Stimulus and Attentional Mechanisms. Stephanie N. Sedall, Eric S. Allard, Cleveland State University. 33. The cognitive control of encoding and retrieving emotional versus value-based information in younger and older adults. Teal Eich, Columbia University Medical Center, Alan Castel, University of California, Los Angeles. 34. The Effect of Emotional Valence and Arousal on Item and Associative Memory among Younger and Older Adults. Sanchita Gargya, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin, University of Missouri. 35. The positivity bias in aging: motivation or degradation? Sandrine Kalenzaga, University of Decartes, Virginie Lamidey, University de Caen, Anne-Marie Ergis, University of Paris Decartes, David Clarys, University de Poitiers, Pascale Piolino, University of Paris Decartes. 36. Aging and Local Context Effects During Item Directed Forgetting. Sara N. Gallant, Ryerson University, Benjamin J. Dyson, University of Sussex, Lixia Yang, Ryerson University. 37. Understanding Intraindividual Variability in Positive and Negative Affect in Older Adults. Sean A. McGlynn, Wendy A. Rogers, Georgia Institute of Technology. 38. Negative Affect and Anticipatory Coping Elicit Greater Cognitive Interference in Older Adults. Brent Nara, North Carolina State University. Individual Differences 39. Gender, BMI and Cognition Relationships in the Seattle Longitudinal StudyGender, BMI and Cognition Relationships in the Seattle Longitudinal Study. Eric S. Emerick, Youngstown State University, Julie Blaskewicz Boron, University of Nebraska Omaha, Sherry L. Willis, K. Warner Schaie, University of Washington. 40. Cognitive Change Across the Lifespan: Four-year longitudinal findings in the Dallas Lifespan Brain Study (DLBS). Xi Chen, Sara B. Festini, Ian M. McDonough, Denise C. Park, University of Texas at Dallas. 41. Costs and Benefits of Being (In)Active. Eric S. Allard, Merim Bilalic, Nemanja Vaci, Bartosz Gula, Klagenfurt University. 42. Analyzing effects of bilingualism, leisure, employment, and education on cognitive functioning. Sara Incera, Lixia Yang, Ryerson University. 43. Aging perceptions and self-efficacy mediate the association between personality and depressive symptoms in non-demented older adults. Deirdre M. O'Shea, Vonetta M. Dotson, Robert A. Fieo, University of Florida. 44. Education modifies the effect and neural mechanisms of cognitive training in older adults with subjective cognitive decline. Sylvie Belleville, Benjamin Boller, Amilie Ouellet, Samira Mellah, University of Montreal. 45. Understanding Cohort Differences in Cognitive Functioning: Evidence from the Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) National Study. Stefan Agrigoroaei, University catholique de Louvain, Matthew Hughes, Margie E. Lachman, Brandeis University. 46. CALLA: A new framework on lifespan cognitive development. Rachel Wu, University of California, Riverside, Thomas Hannagan, INSERM-CEA-Human Brain Project, Feng Vankee Lin, University of Rochester Medical Center. 47. Associations between Cognitive Functions and Patterns of Social Engagement in Chinese Elderly Immigrants in Canada. Brenda Iok Wong, Lixia Yang, Ryerson University. 48. To Switch or not to Switch: Role of Cognitive Control in Working Memory Training in Older Adults. Chandramallika Basak, Margaret A. O'Connell, University of Texas at Dallas. 49. Potential explanations for age equivalence on a novel and complex learning task. David J. Frank, Case Western Reserve University, Dayna R. Touron, University of North Carolina at Greensboro. 50. Testing the Mediating Effect of Processing Speed on Age and Select Cognitive Measures: A Parallel Process Latent Growth Curve Approach. Edward Liebmann, David K. Johnson, University of Kansas, Jason Hassenstabk, Washington University School of Medicine. 51. Gray matter volumes and cognitive predictors of two types of video game learning: Multiple Factor Analysis and Mediation Analyses. Evan T. Smith, Margaret O'Connell, Shuo Qin, Chandramallika Basak, University of Texas at Dallas. 52. Engaged Older Adults and Compression of Cognitive Morbidity. Graham J. McDougall Jr., Monica G. Wedgeworth, Joshua P. Eyer, University of Alabama. 53. Age Differences in Search and Satisficing during Self-Regulated Learning. Jessie Chin, Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign. 54. Personality: Preliminary Age Norms for Older Adults Age 65 and Older. Nasreen A. Sadeq, Elise G. Valdes, Angela Sardina, Aryn L. Harrison Bush, Ross Andel, University of South Florida. Associative Memory 55. Within-trial versus inter-trial associations in free recall among young and older adults. Amy A. Overman, Michelle E. Stocker, Elon University, Joseph D. W. Stephens, North Carolina A&T State University. 56. Face-name association learning in autosomal-dominant Alzheimer’s disease. Brendan Pulsifer, Daniel J. Norton, Ana Baena, Francisco Lopera, Yakeel T. Quiroz, Massachusetts General Hospital. 57. Context Effects in Phantom Recollection in Older and Younger Adults. Casey Williamson, Kethera Fogler, Amanda Feldman, Natalie Hicks, James Madison University. 58. Aging and Cue Interaction Effects in Causal Learning. Jessica Parks Arnold, Sharon Mutter, Danielle Lowry, Meagan Luttrell, Western Kentucky University. 59. Not all associations age equally: Presentation format effects associative binding in older adults. John M. Huhn, III, Nancy A. Dennis, Pennsylvania State University, Abigail B. Steinsiek, Amy Overman, Elon University. POSTER SESSION 4 Saturday, April 16, 4:00 – 6:00 Training 1. Examining the Efficacy of a Digital Game Cognitive Intervention in an Ethnically Heterogeneous Sample of Older Adults. William C. M. Grenhart, Shenghao Zhang, Anne Collins McLaughlin, Jason C. Allaire, North Carolina State University. 2. The Longitudinal Effects of Cognitive Speed of Processing Training in Parkinson’s Disease. Elise Valdes, University of South Florida, Melissa L. O'Connor. North Dakota State University, Ergun Y. Uc, University of Iowa, Robert A. Houser, Ross Andel, Jerri D. Edwards, University of South Florida. 3. Changes in neural substrates resulting from speed of processing training in older adults. Christina E. Webb, Pennsylvania State University, Kristina M. Visscher, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Nancy A. Dennis, Lesley A. Ross, Pennsylvania State University. 4. Training improves young and older adult implementation of spaced retrieval practice. Geoffrey B. Maddox, Rahul Peravali, Tierney Linville, Rhodes College. 5. Comparing the transfer effects of simultaneous and sequential combined modality training in older adults. L. Lai, H. Bruce, L. Bherer, K. Z. H. Li, Concordia University. 6. The Gamification of Cognitive Training: Are Brain Games Effective? Dustin J. Souders, Walter R. Boot, Florida State University, Kenneth Blocker, Georgia Institute of Technology, Thomas Vitale, Nelson Roque, Neil Charness, Florida State University. 7. Effects of RTS video game training and gaming strategies on cognition and neural activity in multi-tasking ability in older adults. Chandramallika Basak, Kaoru Nashiro, Margaret O’Connell, Xi Chen, Shuo Qin, University of Texas at Dallas. 8. Cognitive Training for Ethnic Minority Older Adults in the United States: A Review. Marian Tzuang, Jocelynn Owusu, George W. Rebok, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Marilyn S. Albert, Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Adam P. Spira, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Social Cognition 9. Memory for Important Faces: The Role of Aging and Social Goals. Mary B. Hargis, Alan D. Castel, University of California, Los Angeles. 10. Age Deficits in Facial Affect Recognition: The Influence of Dynamic Cues. Sarah A. Grainger, Julie D. Henry, University of Queensland, Louise H. Phillips, University of Aberdeen, Eric J. Vanman, University of Queensland, Roy Allen, University of Aberdeen. 11. Age-Related Vulnerabilities to Social-Engineering Attacks. Donovan Ellis, Harold Rocha, Devon Weir, Sandeep Dommaraju, Huizi Yang, Melis Muradoglu, Natalie Ebner, University of Florida. 12. Older Adults with Visual Impairments: Potential Barriers to Social Connectedness. Kimberly C Preusse, Elena T Gonzalez, Tracy L Mitzner, Jenny L Singleton, Wendy A Rogers, Georgia Institute of Technology. 13. The Relationship Between Cognitive Decline and Social Cognition in the Aging. Echo E. Leaver, Brittany Lowery, Meredith Patterson, Salisbury University. 14. Effects of healthy aging on neural recruitment during retrieval of a highly emotional public event. Jaclyn Ford, Elizabeth Kensinger, Boston College. 15. The Effects of Stereotype Threat on the Associative Memory Deficit of Older Adults. Matthew S. Brubaker, Springfield College, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin, University of Missouri. 16. Age-related preservation of social learning in a repeated trust game. Phoebe E. Bailey, Western Sydney University, Australia, Katherine Petridis, Skye McLennan, Australian Catholic University, Australia, Ted Ruffman, University of Otago, New Zealand, Peter G. Rendell, Australian Catholic University, Australia. 17. Relationship between off topic verbosity, executive function and emotion recognition in older men. Skye N McLennan, Gill Terrett, Peter Rendell, Australian Catholic University. Language 18. Converging Evidence for Age-Invariance in the Audiovisual Benefit in Spoken Word Recognition. Joel Myerson, Sandra Hale, Brent Spehar, Nancy Tye-Murrary, Mitchell Sommers, Washington University in St. Louis. 19. The relationship between crystallized knowledge and word retrieval: What you know won’t hurt you. Lori E. James, University of Colorado Colorado Springs, Meredith A. Shafto, University of Cambridge, Lise Abrams, University of Florida, Lorraine K. Tyler, Cam-CAN, University of Cambridge. 20. Unexpected Effects of Dual Task Cycling and Picture Complexity on Information Completeness and Sentence Complexity in the Sentences on Young and Older Adults. Lori J. P. Altmann, Tiphanie Raffeteau, Lena Wedeen, Tyler Dwyer, Morgan Billinger, Devon Hall, Lindsay DeArce, Chris J. Hass, University of Florida. 21. Executive Function Skill Supports Online Comprehension for Older Adult Monolinguals and Bilinguals. Megan Zirnstein, Janet G. van Hell, Judith F. Kroll, Pennsylvania State University. 22. The Effect of Variable Semantic Input on Novel Vocabulary Learning In Younger and Older Adults. Nichole Runge, Mitchell S. Sommers, Joe Barcroft, Washington University in St. Louis. 23. Reading: Effects of Aging on the Interplay of Knowledge and Processing. Peter C. Gordon, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Heather H. Wright, East Carolina University, Caitlin Wood, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 24. Literacy Skill Modulates Age Differences in the Use of Context in Language Processing. Shukhan Ng, Brennan R. Payne, Allison A. Steen, Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow, Kara D. Federmeier, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 25. The Effects of Age and Literacy Skill on Processing Lexical Ambiguities. Allison A. Steen, Shukhan Ng, Brennan R. Payne, Kara D. Federmeier, Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 26. Emotional Sentence Production in Parkinson’s Disease. Audrey A. Hazamy, Brooklyn College CUNY, Lori J.P. Altmann, Dawn Bowers, University of Florida, Michelle S. Troche, Teachers College, Columbia University. 27. Age differences in language production: The neural correlates of semantic inference, phonological facilitation, and target picture frequency. Avery A. Rizio, Michele T. Diaz, Pennsylvania State University. 28. Examining the effects of age and hearing acuity on lexical detection latencies in linguistically complex sentences. Eriko Atagi, Diego Placido, Arthur Wingfield, Volen National Center for Complex Systems, Brandeis University. 29. Measures of lexical diversity in written texts provided by older and younger adults. Gitit KavÃ, Yoram M. Kalman, Daniil Umanski, The Open University, Israel. Genetics 30. Paradoxical APOE Genotype Modulation of Adult Cognitive Functioning as a Function of Childhood Disadvantage. Carol E. Franz, University of California San Diego, Michael J. Lyons, Boston University, Asad Beck, William S. Kremen, University of California San Diego. 31. Subjective memory assessment and memory performance: Role of mood, APOE genotype and beta-amyloid deposition. Marci M. Horn, Kristen M. Kennedy, Karen M. Rodrigue, University of Texas at Dallas. 32. Level and change in cognitive performance in older adults without dementia: Effects of single polymorphisms. Erika J. Laukka, Ylva Köhnck, Martin Lövdén, Laura Fratiglioni, Lars Bäckman, Karolinska Institutet and Stockholm University. 33. Executive Function Performance and Change is Predicted by Genetic Risk (APOE), Intensified by COMT and BDNF, and Moderated by Lifestyle Activities. Shraddha Sapkota, University of Alberta, Lars Bäckman, Karolinska Institutet, Roger A. Dixon, University of Alberta. 34. A Longitudinal Study of Cognitive Function and Genetic Variants. Sarah L. Eisel, Brent J. Small, University of South Florida. 35. Genetic and Environmental Mechanisms of Cognitive Aging: Evidence from the Health and Retirement Study. Shannon K. Runge, Brent J. Small, University of South Florida. 36. Age-Related Magnification of Dopamine Transporter Genotype Effects on Feedback-Based Cognitive Sequence Learning. Sylvia P. Larson, Angelica R. Boeve, Saint Olaf College, Mark A. Gluck, Rutgers University, Jessica R. Simon, Saint Olaf College. 37. Association between genetic risk factors and sleep problems in non-demented older adults. Angeliki Tsapanou, Yaakov Stern, Columbia University. 38. Dopamine receptor genes modulate associative memory in old age. Yvonne Brehmer, Goran Papenberg, Nina Becker, Erika J. Laukka, Karolinska Institutet & Stockholm University, Moshe Naveh-Benjamin, University of Missouri, Laura Fratiglioni, Lars Bäckman, Karolinska Institutet and Stockholm University. 39. Late Onset Alzheimer’s disease risk variants in cognitive decline: The PATH Though Life Study. Shea J Andrews, Debjani Das, Kaarin J Anstey, Simon Easteal, Australian National University. Health 40. Cardiovascular Risk and Context-Dependent Hippocampal Connectivity in Older Adults. Liesel-Ann Meusel, Carol Greenwood, Ekaterina Tchistiakova, Matthew Parrott, Bradley MacIntosh, Nicole Anderson, University of Toronto. 41. Mediation of the Association of Cardiovascular Risk Factors with Cognitive Change by Depressive Symptoms: Cardiovascular Health Study. Nicole M. Armstrong, Michelle C. Carlson, Qian-Li Xue, Johns Hopkins University, Mercedes R. Carnethon, Northwestern University, Caterina Rosano, University of Pittsburgh, Paulo H.M. Chaves, Florida International University, Karen Bandeen-Roche, Alden L. Gross, Johns Hopkins University. 42. Aging and Memory for Medication Information of Varying Severity. Mary B. Hargis, Alan D. Castel, University of California, Los Angeles. 43. The Contribution of Health and Cognitive Functioning to Changes in Subjective Age. Matthew L. Hughes, Margie Lachman, Brandeis University. 44. Association of current versus more intensive targets for hypertension control with cognition: Findings from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos. Melissa Lamar, Donghong Wu, Ramon A. Durazo-Arvizu, University of Illinois at Chicago, Adam M. Brickman, Columbia University, Hector M. Gonzalez, Michigan State University, Wassim Tarrif, Wayne State University, Martha L. Daviglus, University of Illinois at Chicago. 45. The Health, Ageing, and Retirement Transitions in Sweden (HEARTS) Study. Pär Bjälkebring, Georg Henning, Magnus Lindwall, Ann-Ingeborg Berg, Sandra Buratti, Isabelle Hansson, Linda Hassing, Marie Kivi, Valgeir Thorvald, Boo Johansson, Gothenburg University. 46. The impact of pro-inflammatory cytokines on learning and memory in late-life depression and healthy older adults. Rebecca A Charlton, Goldsmiths University of London, Melissa Lamar, Aifeng Zhang, Xinguo Ren, Olusola Ajilore, Ghanshyam N. Pandey, University of Illinois at Chicago. 47. What underlying lifestyle and health factors predict cognition? A principal component analysis on the Dallas Lifespan Brain Study. Sara B. Festini, Michelle E. Farrell, Xi Chen, Denise C. Park, University of Texas at Dallas. 48. The Influence of Memory Failures on Subjective Age. Jennifer A Bellingtier, Shevaun D. Neupert, North Carolina State University. Prospective Memory 49. Prospective and retrospective memory are differentially related to omission and commission errors in medication adherence in multimorbidity. Andreas Ihle, University of Geneva, Jennifer Inauen, Urte Scholz, Claudia König, Barbara Holzer, University of Zurich, Lukas Zimmerli, Hospital Olten, Edouard Battegay, Robert Tobias, University of Zurich, Matthias Kliegel, University of Geneva. 50. Influence of Importance on Age-Related Differences in Prospective Memory Monitoring and Cue Detection. B. Hunter Ball, Julie M. Bugg, Washington University in St. Louis. 51. Do Implementation Instructions Improve Prospective Memory Performance in Younger and Older Adults? Bethany A. Lyon, Jason Hicks, Katie E. Cherry, Louisiana State University. 52. The Role of Context and Memory Strategies in Prospective Memory Commission Errors. Jill Talley Shelton, Iain Scott, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, Michael K. Scullin, Baylor University, Julie M. Bugg, Washington University in St. Louis. 53. About the Encoding of Prospective Memory Intentions. Michael K. Scullin, Michelle Dasse, Baylor University, Khuyen Nguyen, Ji Hae Lee, Washington University in St. Louis, Courtney Kurinec, Baylor University, Mark McDaniel, Washington University in St. Louis. 54. Divided Attention, Memory Overwriting, and Prospective Memory Commission Errors. Michelle N. Dasse, Mericyn E. Daunis, Madison L. Krueger, Matthew J. Willis, Michael K. Scullin, Baylor University. 55. Prospective memory performance: The role of age, selective attention, and working memory capacity. Jessie D Martin, Paul Verhaeghen, Georgia Institute of Technology. 56. The Effect of Olfactory Cues on Prospective Memory. Natalee Baldwin, Richard Pak, Clemson University. 57. How to help older adults remember to remember better? Nathan Rose, Australian Catholic University. 58. Prospective Memory performance and aging: The relative influence of cue-action association and focality. Nicola Ballhausen, University of Geneva, Katharina M. Schnitzspahn, University of Aberdeen, Matthias Kliegel, University of Geneva. 59. Inter-individual differences in intra-individual change of Prospective Memory performance in old age: Which cognitive processes predict the development of Prospective Memory over time? Sascha Zuber, Andreas Ihle, University of Geneva, Daniel Zimprich, Ulm University, Matthias Kliegel, University of Geneva. 60. Does Stereotype Threat Influence Prospective Memory? Sherrie Parks, Stephanie Clancy Dollinger, Southern Illinois University Carbondale. POSTER SESSION 5 Sunday, April 17, 10:30 – 12:00 Neuroscience 1. Bootstrapped Slope Estimation for Age-Related Brain Changes. Alexandra Grant, Roanoke College. 2. Age-related differences in neural correlates of multiple identity tracking. Didem Pehlivanoglu, Paul Verhaeghen, Georgia Institute of Technology. 3. Aging and modulation of cognitive load by emotions in working memory: A Visual SteadyState Evoked Potentials study. Shivangi Jain, Paul Verhaeghen, Georgia Institute of Technology. 4. A cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis of age-related structural changes in the medial temporal lobe including entorhinal sub-divisions. Patricia Marshall, Morgan D. Barense, Nicole D. Anderson, University of Toronto. 5. Associative learning, recollection and hippocampal volume in older adults. Rachel Clark, Michael Freedberg, Eliot Hazeltine, Michelle W Voss, University of Iowa. 6. Expert and Novice Mechanisms of Movement Timing: Bilateral Recruitment, Task Complexity, and Adult-Age Differences. Ralf Krampe, KU Leuven, Nicole Wenderoth, ETH Zurich, Ann Lavryssen, Stephan Swinnen, KU Leuven. 7. Estimated striatal brain iron accumulation across the adult lifespan relates to speed, executive, and verbal abilities with anatomic specificity. Stan Colcombe, Anna MacKayBrandt, Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research. 8. Behavioral and Neural Characteristics of Age-Related Changes in Cognitive Control Strategy Use. Stephanie Fountain-Zaragoza, Ruchika Shaurya Prakash, Clem Wegman, Ohio State University. 9. Age and performance effects in functional connectivity weighted by structural connectivity. Yunglin Gazes, Daniel Drake, David Parker, F. DuBois Bowman, Yaakov Stern, Columbia University School of Medicine. 10. Spatial retrocueing benefits on VSTM diminishes with aging. Lauren Morgan, Jon Strunk, Sarah Reaves, Paul Verhaeghen, Audrey Duarte, Georgia Institute of Technology. Health 11. Contribution of cardiovascular fitness to cognitive performance from young adulthood to late-mid life. Anna MacKay-Brandt, Brittany DeFeis, Emil Agarunov, Paula McKinley, Richard Sloan, Yaakov Stern, Columbia University. 12. Moderation of age, nutrition, and inflammation on cognitive functioning among older adults. Elizabeth Handing, Brent Small, Ross Andel, Cathy McEvoy, Nagi Kumar, University of South Florida. 13. Racial differences in neurocognitive outcomes post-stroke. Neco Johnson, Maria Marquine, San Diego State University, Carolyn Baum, Alex Wong, Washington University in St. Louis, Allen Heinemann, Northwestern University, Susan Magasi, University of Illinois at Chicago, Robert Heaton, University of California, San Diego. 14. Process dissociation estimates of Recollection are particularly sensitive to the earliest stages of Alzheimer Disease and biomarkers in non-demented healthy control individuals. Peter R Millar, Dept. of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis David A Balota, Dept. of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Dept. of Neurology, Washington University in St. Louis, Geoffrey B Maddox, Dept. of Psychology, Rhodes College, Janet M Duchek, Dept. of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, Andrew J Aschenbrenner, Dept. of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, Larry L Jacoby, Dept. of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, Anne M Fagan, Charles F and Joanne Knight Alzheimer Disease Research Center, Dept. of Neurology, Washington University in St. Louis, John C Morris, Charles F and Joanne Knight Alzheimer Disease Research Center, Dept. of Neurology, Washington University in St. Louis Speech and Language 15. The Interaction of Fluid and Crystallized Ability in Aging and Speech Perception. Avanti Dey, Mitchell S Sommers, Washington University in St. Louis. 16. Santa Claus, the Tooth Fairy, and auditory-visual integration: Unimodal performance accounts for age differences in Auditory-visual speech perception. Mitchell Sommers, Nancy Tye-Murray, Joel Myerson, Sandra Hale, Brent Spehar, Washington University in St. Louis. 17. Time-varying effects of physical function on cognition in older adulthood. Briana N. Sprague, Christine B. Phillips, Lesley A. Ross, Pennsylvania State University. 18. Age Differences in Efficiency of Information Uptake while Foraging in Multi-Text Environments. Xiaomei Liu, Jessie Chin, Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow, Daniel G. Morrow, Wai-Tat Fu, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. 19. Jessica, Jennifer, or Jenna? High First Syllable Frequency Impairs Older Adults' Retrieval of Proper Names. Danielle K. Davis, Lise Abrams, Meagan T. Farrell, University of Florida. 20. Tip of the Tongue States: Retrieval Attempts Reduce Recurrence. Emma Gardner, Pomona College, Patricia Xi, Claremont Graduate University, Deborah Burke, Pomona College. 21. Parallel Stress Effects on Speech Fluency and Word Retrieval in Young and Older Adults. Lori E. James, Marissa J. Metz, Christopher J. Schmank, Brittany N. Chambers, University of Colorado Colorado Springs. 22. Coherence, Cognition, and Psychosocial Processes in the Older Adult. Heather Harris Wright, Stephen Kintz, Amy Henderson, Valentyna Hibbs, East Carolina University. 23. Investigating Central Auditory Integration: The effects of age and temporal distortion. Tess Ulrich, Natalee Clarkson, Graham Albert, Dana Murphy, Mitchell Sommers, Brent Spehar, Nipissing University. 24. The Time Course of Older Adult Sentence Comprehension Revealed by Eye Movements. Nicole M. Amichetti, Zoe Brown, Arthur Wingfield, Brandeis University. 25. The Interaction of Speech Prosody and Processing Effort Revealed through Pupil Dilation. Nicole M. Amichetti, Zoe Brown, Arthur Wingfield, Brandeis University. Memory 26. Subjective Memory Complaints: Predictors and Related Cognitive Outcomes. Caitlin Tyrrell, Joie Molden, Molly Maxfield, University of Colorado Colorado Springs. 27. Exploring the maintenance of the Self-Reference Effect following a one week delay in healthy older adults. Nicole Carson, R. Shayna Rosenbaum, Victoria M. Smith, York University, Kelly J. Murphy, University of Toronto. 28. The value in rushing: Aging and value-directed remembering when short on time. Catherine D. Middlebrooks, Tyson K. Kerr, Alan D. Castel, University of California Los Angeles. 29. Category Learning Strategies in Younger and Older Adults: Rule Abstraction and Memorization. Chris Wahlheim, Mark McDaniel, Jeri Little, Washington University in St. Louis. 30. Structured autobiographical memory training as a preventive strategy for cognitive and social functioning decline. Fiona Leahy, Aston University, Ian James, Powys Teaching Health Board, Nathan Ridout, Carol Holland, Aston University. 31. Searching for Own-Age and Own-Race Perceptual Biases Using Visual Search. Cynthia Flores, Sandra Hale, Washington University in St. Louis. 32. Feeling Old, Doing Fine: The Effects of Subjective Age on Memory. Tyson K. Kerr, Alan D. Castel, University of California, Los Angeles. 33. Group memory intervention promotes positive lifestyle change in healthy older adults. Susan Vandermorris, April Au, Angela Troyer, Baycrest, University of Toronto. 34. Consolidation of implicit skills across human life span. Karolina Janacsek, Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, Dóra Juhász, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary. 35. Priming of Landmarks During Object-Location Tasks: Effects on Self-Efficacy of Older Adults. Kyle R. Kraemer, S. R. Black, University of Alabama. 36. The Relationship between Pure Tone Audiometry and Cognition in Late Middle-Age. Noah Bluestone, Alice Cronin-Golomb, Mark Logue, Boston University, Carol Franz, Matthew Panizzon, University of California, San Diego, Arthur Wingfield, Brandeis Universitymind-. 37. Age-related Differences in Spatial Memory Formation in a New Virtual Morris Water Maze Task. Jimmy Y. Zhong, Georgia Institute of Technology, Kathy R. Magnusson, Oregon State University, Matthew E. Swarts, Cherita A. Clendinen, Scott D. Moffat, Georgia Institute of Technology. 38. Retrieval Flexibility in Young and Older Adults. Lione North, Claremont Graduate University, Daniel Caldera, Emily Munoz, Darlene Olfman, Leah Light, Pitzer College. 39. Mental Time Travel in Context. Lisa Emery, Heather Burkett, Andrew Burdette, Kathryn Hardin, Appalachian State University. 40. Object and Scene Discrimination Context Effects in Aging. Ashley Lawrence, Lee Ryan, University of Arizona. 41. Familiarity-Based Memory in Healthy Aging and Amnesic Mild Cognitive Impairment. Elsa Baena, University of Arizona, Devin Duke, Western University, London, Ontario, Ben Bowles, University of California, Berkeley, Chris B. Martin, Ken McRae, Stefan Köhler, Western University, London, Ontario, Nicole D. Anderson, Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Centre, Toronto. 42. Reading "Control Weight" and Remembering "Lose Weight": Aging, Knowledge, and Memory for Inferences. Nadia M. Brashier, Julian Pino, Gabriella G. Rivera, Sarah L. Turner, Gavan J. Fitzsimons, Elizabeth J. Marsh, Duke University. Using Technology 43. Using the PARO Robot to Reduce Stress in Older Adults During a Cognitively Demanding Task. Denise Y. Geiskkovitch, Sean A. McGlynn, Tracy L. Mitzner, Wendy A. Rogers, Georgia Institute of Technology. 44. A Tablet for Healthy Ageing: The effect of a tablet computer training intervention on cognitive abilities of older adults. Eleftheria Vaportzis, Mike Martin, Alan J. Gow, HeriotWatt University. 45. Flexibility of switching between temporal and spatial attention in older drivers and its relation to driving behavior. Eleanor Callaghan, Carol Holland, Klaus Kessler, Ashton University. 46. The Relationship between Problems with Vision and the Decision to Avoid Driving in Complex Situation in Older Adults. Jarrett Evans, Neil Charness, Florida State University. 47. Mindsets of Technology Ability, Age, and Cognition Correlates. Lawton Pybus, William C. M. Grenhart, Shenghao Zhang, Anne Collins McLaughlin, Jason C. Allaire, North Carolina State University. 48. A New Tool for Assessing Mobile Device Proficiency in Older Adults: The Mobile Device Proficiency Questionnaire (MDPQ). Nelson Roque, Walter Boot, Florida State University. 49. Mobile technology as a compensatory tool for cognitive decline in older adults engaging in diabetes self-management. Madison Sauls, Daniel N. Endres, Anne C. Whitlock, Anne C. McLaughlin, Clemson University. 50. Designing social networking applications for older adults: Insights from current users and non-users. Michael T. Bixter, Akanksha Prakash, Kenneth A. Blocker, Tracy L. Mitzner, Wendy A. Rogers, Georgia Institute of Technology. 51. Two times usability testing before and after 2 weeks usage of skin care cosmetics: What can this method tell us about older adults’ problems to use daily life things? Shinnosuke Tanaka, Masashi Sugimoto, Akari Koyama , Etsuko T. Harada , University of Tsukuba. Assessment 52. Recurring Study Participation and Practice Effects. Diana Klakotskaia, Moshe NavehBenjamin, University of Missouri. 53. Cognitive Throughput, Sensitive Measure of Cognitive Aging from Psychological Influence. Jinshil Hyun, Martin Sliwinski, Pennsylvania State University. 54. The real-time effects of stress, affect and repetitive thinking on memory function in naturalistic settings. Martin Sliwinski, Joshua Smyth, Jinshil Hyun, Pennsylvania State University. 55. Cognitive performance in everyday life: Self-reported cognitive failures reflect personality and affectivity rather than actual cognitive functioning. Julia Karbach, Tanja Koenen, Goethe-University Frankfurt. 56. Influence of hearing loss on Neuropsychologists’ assessment and treatment best practices. Kate Dupuis, Iris Yusupov, Susan Vandermorris, Kelly Murphy, Dmytro Rewilak, Kathryn A. Stokes, Baycrest Health Sciences. 57. Successful Memory Aging is Associated with Advantages in Other Cognitive and Risk Domains. Kirstie L. McDermott, G. Peggy McFall, Roger A. Dixon, University of Alberta. 58. Informant-reported cognitive decline and 4-year change in life engagement. Diane Hosking, Kaarin Anstey, Australian National University.