This study reports the effects of a 12-week multimodular cognitive
rehabilitation training program on memory performance in two groups of
older adults. In the Memory Training module, participants were instructed
on the nature of memory and how to improve memory performance; internal
and external strategies were described and practiced over the training
sessions. Memory performance was assessed by four tests: Alpha Span,
Brown-Peterson, Hopkins Verbal Learning Test − Revised (HVLT-R), and
Logical Stories. One group received training on entry into the study
(Early Training Group, ETG), the other after a 3-month delay (Late
Training Group, LTG). The results showed no training-related improvement
in working memory (Alpha Span), primary memory (Brown-Peterson, HVLT-R),
or recognition memory (HVLT-R). While the most direct analyses of a
training effect (analyses of covariance) rarely demonstrated significant
effects, exploratory analyses provided some evidence for a training
benefit in several measures of secondary memory (Logical Stories; HVLT-R)
and strategic processing (Brown-Peterson; Logical Stories; HVLT-R).
Positive results were largely restricted to the ETG, possibly because the
LTG lost motivation as a consequence of their delayed training. The
results need to be treated with caution, but are promising for the
rehabilitation of memory functioning in older adults (JINS, 2007,
13, 132–142.)