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Showing posts with the label effect of aging on recall

Precerpt from My 20th Language: Aging and Recall

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  🧠 When Words Take the Scenic Route: Aging, Language, and the Gentle Art of Retrieval As I’ve grown older, I’ve noticed a subtle but persistent shift in how quickly I can summon certain words—especially names and everyday nouns. The knowledge hasn’t vanished; it’s still tucked safely in the archives. But the path to it has grown a little longer, like a familiar street that now has a few more stop signs. What used to be instantaneous—snapping to mind like a reflex—now takes a beat. Sometimes a few seconds. Occasionally, half a minute. It’s not alarming, just... different. And it turns out, it’s also completely normal. Cognitive research backs this up: while processing speed tends to slow with age, comprehension, vocabulary, and verbal reasoning often remain steady or even improve. Verbs and functional language—the linguistic glue of everyday conversation—are especially resilient. They’re used constantly, embedded in procedural memory, and rarely go missing. It’s the proper nouns,...