Publication | Closed Access
A Multimodal Assessment of Sensory Thresholds in Aging
66
Citations
26
References
1998
Year
Sodium ChlorideNeuropsychologyElderly SubjectsNeurolinguisticsCognitionAttentionSensory ScienceSocial SciencesPsychologySensory ThresholdsSensometricsCognitive NeurosciencePsychophysicsMultisensory IntegrationNeuropsychological FunctioningCognitive ScienceExperimental PsychologyIndividual ModalitiesNeuroscience
Young and elderly subjects yielded forced-choice detection thresholds in each of seven sensory tasks: (1) taste of sodium chloride, (2) smell of butanol, (3) cooling, (4) low-frequency vibrotaction, (5) high-frequency vibrotaction, (6) low-frequency hearing, and (7) high-frequency hearing. Average scores across these tasks nearly perfectly separated the 22 elderly from the 15 young subjects. For individual modalities, however, separation between the groups varied from complete (high-frequency touch) to negligible (low-frequency hearing). Scores on the Boston Picture Naming Test and especially the Wechsler Logical Memory Test correlated strongly with average threshold score (Pearson r = .80) and moderately with scores on individual modalities. This sensory-cognitive link is not caused, as might be supposed, by diminishing age-related capacity to handle the detection task, because the very same task resulted in negligible age effect (low-frequency hearing) and large effect (high-frequency hearing) in the same subjects.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1