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Differential visual short term memory performance between young and healthy older adults

The research reported was inspired by the Perfect and Maylor (2000) chapter ‘Rejecting the Dull Hypothesis’. This suggested that cognitive ageing research should not focus purely on whether younger adults outperform older adults on a given task. Hartley, Speer, Jonides, Reuter-Lorez and Smith (2001) showed that older adults do not maintain the dissociability of naming identity, visual identity, and spatial location abilities that is seen in younger adults. Away from the ageing literature, Brown, Forbes and McConnell (2006) demonstrated improvement in visual task performance when the availability of verbal coding was increased. The hypothesis that older adults are less likely to use task specific cognitive mechanisms during short-term visual memory tasks was explored. This was carried out by means of a series of 8 experiments (outlined below), which broadly looked at differences in verbal interference effects on visual task performance, differences in Visual Patterns Task performance based on the availability of verbal encoding, and assessed for age-related differences in interference from an executive task in Visual Patterns Task performance. Data was interpreted through the prism of the Scaffolding Theory of Aging (Park & Reuter-Lorenz, 2009), which suggests that compensatory recruitment is employed both young and older adults in response to extrinsic challenges such as task difficulty, and intrinsic challenges, such as declining performance with age. Experiments 1-3 focused on differential effects of articulatory suppression on visual task performance between young (18-25) and older (60-75) adults. Older adults showed negative effects of suppression in short-term maintenance tasks that were not present in younger adults. Both age groups showed negative effects in a mental image rotation task. This suggested a level of verbal activation in visual tasks for both age groups, but that this activation was more common in older adults. Experiments 4-5 assessed differences in Visual Patterns Task performance between both age-groups depending on the availability of verbal encoding. Younger adults displayed the benefit of available verbal encoding with simultaneous but not sequential presentation of information. Older adults showed a benefit of verbal coding in the simultaneous task if the sequential task featured ordered, not randomised presentation pathways. This suggested that older adult task performance may be affected by all conditions within an experiment, not just the current manipulation condition. Experiments 6-7 demonstrated that older adults’ performance in the simultaneous presentation version of the Visual Patterns Task is affected by the availability of verbal encoding in the first task presented to them. Mean performance on subsequent conditions was higher when ‘high verbal coding’ patterns were seen in the first instance. This was not the case for younger adults. The demonstration of a benefit to performance from the ‘high-verbal coding’ pattern set compared to the ‘low-verbal coding’ set was a marker of higher overall performance across all task conditions for younger adults, but not for the older group. This suggested that even if verbal activation during visual task performance was an occurrence for older adults, it was not necessarily a marker for improved performance. Experiment 8 demonstrated that there were no age-related differences in the level of interference from an executive task (Random Month Generation) on Visual Patterns Task performance. This suggested that older adults do not try to actively recruit executive processes during Visual Patterns Task performance to any greater extent than younger adults do. It is suggested that older adults do use specialised task mechanisms to a lesser extent than younger adults in visual memory task performance. It is likely that this is a passive outcome of a decreased inhibition of verbal coding mechanisms, rather than an active attempt to maintain performance through the recruitment of executive cognitive resources. This is seen by the lack of age-group effects from executive interference tasks.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:700042
Date January 2015
CreatorsHorne, Mark James
ContributorsLogie, Robert ; Deary, Ian ; Engle, Randall
PublisherUniversity of Edinburgh
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/17279

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