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Experimental Aging Research
An International Journal Devoted to the Scientific Study of the Aging Process
Volume 43, 2017 - Issue 3
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Original Articles

Online Modulation of Selective Attention is not Impaired in Healthy Aging

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Pages 217-232 | Received 19 Nov 2015, Accepted 23 Jun 2016, Published online: 30 Mar 2017
 

Abstract

Background/Study Context: Reduced processing speed pervades a great many aspects of human aging and cognition. However, little is known about one aspect of cognitive aging in which speed is of the essence, namely, the speed with which older adults can deploy attention in response to a cue.

Methods: The authors compared rapid temporal modulation of cued visual attention in younger (Mage = 22.3 years) and older (Mage = 68.9 years) adults. On each trial of a short-term memory task, a cue identified which of two briefly presented stimuli was task relevant and which one should be ignored. After a short delay, subjects demonstrated recall by reproducing from memory the task-relevant stimulus. This produced estimates of (i) accuracy with which the task-relevant stimulus was recalled, (ii) the influence of stimuli encountered on previous trials (a prototype effect), and (iii) the influence of the trial’s task-irrelevant stimulus.

Results: For both groups, errors in recall were considerably smaller when selective attention was cued before rather than after presentation of the stimuli. Both groups showed serial position effects to the same degree, and both seemed equally adept at exploiting the stimuli encountered on previous trials as a means of supplementing recall accuracy on the current trial.

Conclusion: Younger and older subjects may not differ reliably in capacity for cue-directed temporal modulation of selective attention, or in ability to draw on previously seen stimuli as memory support.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are greatly indebted to Donna Waxman for invaluable assistance at various stages of this project, and we thank Angela Gutchess for helpful comments on an earlier version of the manuscript.

FUNDING

This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health grant MH068404, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Canada Research Chair program, and CELEST, a National Science Foundation Science of Learning Center (SBE-0354378).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health grant MH068404, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Canada Research Chair program, and CELEST, a National Science Foundation Science of Learning Center (SBE-0354378).

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