Publication | Open Access
Age-related decline of visual processing components in change detection.
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Citations
37
References
2010
Year
Early VisionCognitive ScienceAgingVisual CognitionDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceAction MonitoringEye TrackingResponse CriterionChange DetectionCognitionPerceptual User InterfaceNeuroscienceVisual ProcessingAttentionConservative Response CriterionSocial SciencesVisual Processing ComponentsVisual Function
Previous research has suggested that an age-related decline in change detection may be due to older adults using a more conservative response criterion. However, this finding may reflect methodological limitations of the traditional change detection design, in which displays are presented continuously until a change is detected. Across 2 experiments, the authors assessed adult age differences in a version of change detection that required a response after each pair of pre- and postchange displays, thus reducing the potential contribution of response criterion. Older adults performed worse than younger adults, committing more errors and requiring a greater number of display cycles for correct detection. These age-related performance declines were substantially reduced after controlling statistically for elementary perceptual speed. Search strategy was largely similar for the 2 age groups, but perceptual speed was less successful in accounting for age-related variance in detectability when a more precise spatial localization of change was required (Experiment 2). Thus, the negative effect of aging in the present tasks lies in a reduction of detection efficiency due largely to processing speed, though some strategy-level effects may also contribute. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).
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