Publication | Closed Access
Age differences in target identification as a function of retinal location and noise level: Examination of the useful field of view.
173
Citations
15
References
1987
Year
AttentionTarget LettersSocial SciencesTarget IdentificationEarly VisionRetinaRetinal LocationCognitive NeurosciencePsychophysicsPeripheral TargetsCognitive ScienceAssistive TechnologyOphthalmologyAge DifferencesVision ResearchVisual ProcessingVisual FunctionPeripheral Target DetectionEye TrackingNeuroscienceMedicine
Foveal and peripheral target detection were compared in young adults (M age = 22 years) and older adults (M age = 66 years) who were optically corrected for the viewing distance. In a two-alternative, forced-choice task, target letters were presented at 0 degree to 10.5 degrees from fixation. Targets were presented alone, flanked on each side by one noise element (i.e., nontarget letter), or embedded in a horizontal row of 19 noise elements. An Age X Noise Level X Location interaction was obtained, wherein age differences were largest for peripheral targets presented in noise. Slope analyses of latency data showed that the performance of young adults in the high-noise condition was most similar to that of older adults in the low-noise condition. At the functional level, results indicated that aging is associated with a restricted useful field of view. In addition, the data suggest that age differences in search can be described by a model in which older adults take smaller perceptual samples from the visual scene and scan these samples more slowly than do the young adults.
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