|
 |
Web address:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/
111227142535.htm |
|
Elderly Can Be as Fast as Young in Some Brain Tasks, Study Shows
ScienceDaily (Dec. 27, 2011) — Both children and the elderly have slower
response times when they have to make quick decisions in some settings. But
recent research suggests that much of that slower response by the elderly is
a conscious choice to emphasize accuracy over speed.
In fact, healthy older people can be trained to respond faster in some
decision-making tasks without hurting their accuracy -- meaning their
cognitive skills in this area aren't so different from younger adults.
"Many people think that it is just natural for older people's brains to slow
down as they age, but we're finding that isn't always true," said Roger
Ratcliff, professor of psychology at Ohio State University and co-author of
the studies.
"At least in some situations, 70-year-olds may have response times similar
to those of 25-year olds."
Ratcliff and his colleagues have been studying cognitive processes and aging
in their lab for about a decade. In a new study published online this month
in the journal Child Development, they extended their work to
children.
Ratcliff said their results in children are what most scientists would have
expected: very young children have slower response times and poorer accuracy
compared to adults, and these improve as the children mature.
But the more interesting finding is that older adults don't necessarily have
slower brain processing than younger people, said Gail McKoon, professor of
psychology at Ohio State and co-author of the studies.
"Older people don't want to make any errors at all, and that causes them to
slow down. We found that it is difficult to get them out of the habit, but
they can with practice," McKoon said.
Researchers uncovered this surprising finding by using a model developed by
Ratcliff that considers both the reaction time and the accuracy shown by
participants in speeded tasks. Most models only consider one of these
variables.
"If you look at aging research, you find some studies that show older people
are not impaired in accuracy, but other studies that show that older people
do suffer when it comes to speed. What this model does is look at both
together to reconcile the results," Ratcliff said.
Ratcliff, McKoon and their colleagues have used several of the same
experiments in children, young adults and the elderly.
In one experiment, participants are seated in front of a computer screen.
Asterisks appear on the screen and the participants have to decide as
quickly as possible whether there is a "small" number (31-50) or a "large"
number (51-70) of asterisks. They press one of two keys on the keyboard,
depending on their answer.
In another experiment, participants are again seated in front of a computer
screen and are shown a string of letters. They have to decide whether those
letters are a word in English or not. Some strings are easy (the nonwords
are a random string of letters) and some are hard (the nonwords are
pronounceable, such as "nerse").
In the Child Development study, the researchers used the asterisk test on
second and third graders, fourth and fifth graders, ninth and tenth graders,
and college-aged adults. Third graders and college-aged adults participated
in the word/nonword test.
The results showed that there was a rise in accuracy and decrease in
response time on both tasks from the second and third-graders to the
college-age adults.
The younger children took longer than older children and adults to respond
in the experiment, Ratcliff said. They, like the elderly, were taking longer
to make up their mind. But the younger children were also less accurate than
younger adults in this study.
"Younger children are not able to make as good of use of the information
they are presented, so they are less accurate," Ratcliff said. "That
improves as they mature."
Older adults show a different pattern. In a study published in the journal Cognitive
Psychology, Ratcliff and colleagues compared college-age subjects, older
adults aged 60-74, and older adults aged 75-90. They used the same asterisk
and word/nonword tests that were in the Child Development study. They
found that there was little difference in accuracy among the groups, even
the oldest of participants.
However, the college students had faster response times than did the 60-74
year olds, who were faster than the 75-90 year olds.
But the slower response times are not all the result of a decline in skills
among older adults. In a previous study, the researchers encouraged older
adults to go faster on these same tests. When they did, the difference in
their response times compared to college-age students decreased
significantly.
"For these simple tasks, decision-making speed and accuracy is intact even
up to 85 and 90 years old," McKoon said.
That doesn't mean there are no effects of aging on decision-making speed and
accuracy, Ratcliff said. In a study in the Journal of Experimental
Psychology: General, Ratcliff, McKoon and another colleague found (like
in studies from other laboratories) that accuracy for "associative memory"
does decline as people age. For example, older people were much less likely
to remember if they had studied a pair of words together than did younger
adults.
But Ratcliff said that, overall, their research suggests there should be
greater optimism about the cognitive skills of seniors.
"The older view was that all cognitive processes decline at the same rate as
people age," Ratcliff said.
"We're finding that there isn't such a uniform decline. There are some
things that older people do nearly as well as young people."
Ratcliff co-authored the Child Development paper with Jessica Love and John
Opfer of Ohio State and Clarissa Thompson of the University of Oklahoma.
Ratcliff and McKoon co-authored the Cognitive Psychology and Journal
of Experimental Psychology: General papers with Anjali Thapar of Bryn
Mawr College.
Some of the research was supported with grants from the National Institute
on Aging and the National Institute of Mental Health.
Story Source:
The above story is reprinted from
materials provided by Ohio
State University. The original article was written by Jeff
Grabmeier.
Journal Reference:
1. Jeffrey
J. Starns, Roger Ratcliff, Gail McKoon. Evaluating the unequal-variance
and dual-process explanations of zROC slopes with response time data and the
diffusion model. Cognitive Psychology, 2012; 64 (1-2): 1 DOI: 10.1016/j.cogpsych.2011.10.002
Ohio State University (2011, December 27). Elderly can be as fast as young
in some brain tasks, study shows. ScienceDaily. Retrieved January 28,
2012, from http://www.sciencedaily.com /releases/2011/12/111227142535.htm
|