Publication | Closed Access
Age-Related Changes in Executive Function: An Event-Related Potential (ERP) Investigation of Task-Switching
76
Citations
71
References
2007
Year
NeuropsychologyBrain FunctionInhibitory ProcessCognitionFrontal PotentialsAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyAge-related ChangesWorking MemoryExecutive FunctionCognitive NeuroscienceNeuropsychological FunctioningCognitive ScienceTask PerformanceAction MonitoringMedial Frontal NegativityNeuroscienceOlder AdultsEvent-related Potential
Older adults have difficulty when executive control must be brought on line to coordinate ongoing behavior. To assess age-related alterations in executive processing, task-switching performance and event-related potential (ERP) activity were compared in young and older adults on switch, post-switch, pre-switch, and no-switch trials, ordered in demand for executive processes from greatest to least. In stimulus-locked averages for young adults, only switch trials elicited fronto-central P3 components, indicative of task-set attentional reallocation, whereas in older adults, three of the four trial types evinced frontal potentials. In response-locked averages, the amplitude of a medial frontal negativity (MFN), a component reflecting conflict monitoring and detection, increased as a function of executive demands in the ERPs of the young but not those of the older adults. These data suggest altered executive processing in older adults resulting in persistent recruitment of prefrontal processes for conditions that do not require them in the young.
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