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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Effects of elaboration on age differences in memory performance

Whiting, Wythe L., IV 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
2

An emotional bias in processing facial expressions similarities and differences across age /

Hilimire, Matthew R. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M. S.)--Psychology, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2008. / Committee Chair: Paul Corballis; Committee Member: Eric Shumacher; Committee Member: Fredda Blanchard-Fields.
3

The effects of age on within-trial modulation of cognitive control.

Hutcheon, Thomas G. 29 April 2010 (has links)
Cognitive control allows us to function in a world filled with constant stimulation. For example, the act of reading a book requires the ability to inhibit irrelevant information while focusing attention towards the letters on the page. Our cognitive control system regulates what information receives attention and what is denied resources. The goal of the current paper is to investigate the mechanisms underlying the activation and maintenance of the control system and how this process changes in healthy aging. First, the ability of younger and older adults to activate and maintain control in response to trial type manipulations is investigated. Second, improvements are made to recent experimental evidence suggesting younger adults are able to modulate performance based on specific stimulus history. Third, this work is extended to an older population suggesting the ability to modulate performance based on specific stimulus history is maintained in healthy aging. Finally, it is demonstrated that current theories of control fail to account for age-related differences in performance based on the comparison of trial type and specific stimulus manipulations.
4

The effect of explicitly directing attention toward item-feature relationships on source memory and aging: an erp study

Dulas, Michael Robert 11 July 2011 (has links)
Previous evidence has shown that older adults may have specific declines in prefrontal cortex (PFC)-mediated processes supported source memory retrieval, such as strategic retrieval and post-retrieval monitoring. This decline may manifest in the form of attenuated late-frontal ERP effects. Behavioral research suggests that explicitly integrating a target context, or source, with a stimulus during encoding will improve subsequent source memory performance for both younger and older adults. Explicit item-feature binding instructions during encoding may alleviate source memory impairments, in part, by reducing the need for strategic processing during episodic retrieval. The present ERP study investigated whether explicit direction of attention toward item-feature integration may reduce age-related deficits in source memory by alleviating the necessity of frontally-mediated strategic processing at retrieval. Results demonstrated that explicit direction of attention improved source memory accuracy for both young and older adults, but older adults benefited less than the young, indicating additional age-related deficits. ERPs revealed that explicit encoding support attenuated post-retrieval monitoring effects in the young. In the old, explicit encoding instruction resulted in earlier onset of early frontal effects, possibly related to familiarity. Results suggest explicit direction of attention toward item-source integration at encoding may improve source memory by alleviating the need for strategic retrieval, but age-related deficits persist.
5

An age-related comparison of audio and audio plus video presentation modes for conveying technical information

Campbell, Regan Helen 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
6

An emotional bias in processing facial expressions: similarities and differences across age

Hilimire, Matthew R. 02 April 2008 (has links)
Previous research indicates that young adults (aged 18-30) tend to exhibit a negativity bias such that they enhance processing of negative emotional stimuli compared to neutral stimuli. Because of age-differences in emotion regulatory goals, older adults (aged 60+) often exhibit enhanced processing for positive rather than for negative stimuli a positivity effect. I examined age-related differences in processing emotional facial expressions using event-related potentials (ERPs) elicited by task-relevant emotional (i.e., angry, sad, happy) and neutral face images and concurrent task-irrelevant central and peripheral probes. The results indicate that young and older have similarities and differences in their processing of emotional expressions. Both groups exhibit enhanced processing of all emotional facial expressions. This suggests that there is neither a negativity bias nor positivity effect in processing task-relevant emotional facial expressions. Instead, both young and older adults enhance processing of all emotional expressions compared to neutral expressions and therefore exhibit an emotional bias. Young and older adults differ in how the emotional faces affect processing of concurrent stimuli. Emotion enhanced processing of concurrent stimuli presented in other areas of the visual field only for the young adults.
7

The shuttle effect : the development of a model for the prediction of variability in cognitive test performance across the adult life span

Jordan, Ann B January 1998 (has links)
The aim of this thesis was to investigate inter-individual variability on cognitive task performance in normal older adults. In a review of the cognitive aging literature, the implications of a differential perspective were drawn out in order to establish a theoretical and methodological basis for an investigation into variability. A number of regularly occurring patterns, identified on the basis of available reports in the literature, were used to develop a model of variability (the shuttle model). The empirically-based model was located broadly within a neuropsychological framework, and derived explanatory power from the tenets of brain reserve capacity (BRC) theory. It served to describe the bulge in interindividual variability due to aging (the shuttle bulge), and the shifting occurrence of the bulge in relation to the age axis due to cohort and task-related influences (the shuttle shift). A two phase research study was conducted in order to test hypotheses derived from the model. Phase 1 comprised between-groups analyses of normative data covering a broad range of neuropsychological tests in the domains of attention, memory, language, visual and hand motor skills, in order to examine the progression of variability effects across the adult age range. Phase 2 constituted between and within-groups analyses of normative data from a more limited number of neuropsychological tests. It included the examination of raw score distributions and the characteristics of outliers, and was undertaken to explore more closely the nature of the variability phenomena detected in the first phase of the analysis. Taken together, the results of both phases of the investigation revealed statistically significant variability effects in support of the shuttle model. There was a consistent pattern of increased variability in association with older age regardless of functional modality; frequently, in association with later old age, there was also a subsequent decrease in variability (the shuttle bulge). The age of onset of the initial increase in variability occurred earlier or later (the shuttle shift) as a function of four factors: education, gender, task challenge and age-sensitivity of task. The finding of an earlier onset of variability effects for low education, male gender, high task challenge and high age-sensitivity of task was interpreted in terms of BRC threshold theory. The clinical and social implications of the outcome were discussed with special emphasis on the need for a differential perspective on aging, as a complement to the prevailing normative tradition. It was concluded that the shuttle model has considerable heuristic value. It presents an integrative framework for understanding existing variability data and provides clear indications for future research.

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