Episodic memory tasks are generally less well performed by elderly tha
n by young adult subjects. It has been suggested that this age effect
could result from the lack of spontaneous effective encoding and retri
eval strategies, while these strategies are still available as can be
shown when encoding cues are provided by the experimenter. In addition
. the efficacy of such cues could depend on the subject's educational
level. In the present study. young vs elderly subjects, of high vs low
educational level. were enrolled in the cued-recall task of 48 items
designed by Buschke and Grober (1986). In subjects with a low educatio
nal level, it appeared that the cues were insufficient to suppress the
differences of performance between elderly and young subjects. More p
recisely, two main points emerged. Firstly, in highly educated samples
, age does not matter much, at least for this kind of memory task. Sec
ondly, with advancing age, the level of education becomes a more impor
tant predictor of memory efficiency than age, since the old-low sample
performed less well than the other groups in every stage of the test.