Attention and Aging – Lecture 5 PS277   General Information Processing Model Types of Attention Tasks, Aging and Performance  Theories of Aging and Attention  Driving as Everyday.

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Transcript Attention and Aging – Lecture 5 PS277   General Information Processing Model Types of Attention Tasks, Aging and Performance  Theories of Aging and Attention  Driving as Everyday.

Attention and Aging – Lecture 5
PS277
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General Information Processing Model
Types of Attention Tasks, Aging and
Performance
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Theories of Aging and Attention
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Driving as Everyday Application
Older Drivers and Attentional
Capacities
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My parents (mid70’s) and driving
issues
Reaction times,
confusion, etc.
capacity to attend
to various aspects
of visual field
The Importance of Careful Attention –
The Far Side Version
A Schematic of Classic Information
Processing Model (Atkinson & Shiffrin’s
Multi-Store Model)
Types of Attention and Example Tasks
that Measure These Types
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Sustained Attention/Attention
Span over time – (e.g., Air traffic
controllers)
Selective Attention and Search
(e.g., Stroop Task)
Divided Attention and Dual Task
Performance (e.g., driving while
on the cell phone, texting in
lectures?)
Sustained Attention – Vigilance
Measures
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Attention span - monitoring for events
over time – air traffic controllers, etc.
Bunce et al. (1996) – postal workers,
keeping track of degraded computer display
of digits over 10 minutes
Older participants (55-65) who were in
better CV health did better than those in
poorer health
Overall, findings for these tasks suggest
little change with age, except under very
difficult processing conditions – older adults
are more cautious and slower to respond
Selective Attention – DO Stroop Task
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Red
Green
Black
Orange
White
Yellow
Pink
Gray
Purple
Selective Attention and Search
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Visual search tasks – like detecting a specific
target in visual field when occurs in a set of
distractors
Aging differences are magnified if distractors are
complex, and if location of target is unpredictable
Inhibitory processing – some evidence that older
adults may have more trouble ignoring irrelevant
information presented in same modality, but not in
different modality (studying and listening to music)
No clear evidence for things like “mindwandering” being worse with age, however. If you
ask people at random times to recall a word list they
are learning = inhibition is not that big a problem
Dual Attention Tasks and Research
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Lindenberger et al. (2000) – memorizing while
you walk. Old don’t do as well as young:24, 45, 65
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Had to walk a track (oval vs. aperiodic) while
memorizing lists of 16 words using method of loci
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Middle-aged and older people did worse than
young on each task in terms of time and skill,
accuracy was worst on walking for oldest adults
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Walking takes more conscious effort and
resources for old–crossing busy street while chatting
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High levels of training and compensatory aids helped
Research Results for Walking and
Memorizing
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Top: dual-task
costs in walking
speed as function
of age and track
Bottom: dual-task
costs in recall
score as function
of age and track
Implications of Age and Dual Task
Performance
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Cell phone ban and driving – what think?
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Talking on cell phone and crossing King St.
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What about “blue tooth” technology use for
older drivers?
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Age vs. generation vs. other factors,
training?? – how can study this?
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Extensive training can change dual task
situation – reading while taking dictation!
Theories of Aging and Attention
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Processing Speed and Age
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Attentional Resources Model
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Neural Noise Model
Change in Processing Speed - Kail
Information Processing Rates over
Lifespan – Cerella & Hale (1994)
Speed of Processing and Attention
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Limited capacity bottlenecks in early parts of
processing system mean need to transfer
information quickly
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If older adults are slower, this may affect efficiency
of attention processes in general
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Such changes don’t necessarily mean decline in
overall performance - SOC model of Baltes
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Salthouse showed that rates of typing
(words/minute) are maintained even though older
typists are slower at basic processes like tapping
speed, because show longer attentional spans
forward in their looking = example of direct
attentional compensation for speed losses
Attentional Resources Models
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Notions of effort or capacity that are
distinguishable from speed issues
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Widely studied in dual-tasks – e.g. automatization in
driving frees up capacity for other things
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Limited capacity in conscious attention might
decline with age = loss of processing resources, OR
more resources used in later life for daily living
activities, might be less automatic
Walking while memorizing study suggests how
automaticity might be more of issue for physical
function in later life – e.g., depth perception
Neural Noise Models
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Attempt to relate declines in attention and cognition
to brain function more directly
As we age, there is more “noise” and less clear
signals in nervous system with regard to information
representation – loss of dendrites, etc.
Age-related changes in sensory function, perceptual
speed, attention might derive from a general
decline in CNS function (e.g., the relations of
perceptual functions to overall intelligence in later
life of Baltes & Lindenberger)
This is largely speculative at present however
Applications of Attention Research to
Driving
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Older adults show higher rates of accidents per mile
driven (though not higher rates overall)
Useful Field of Vision test (UFOV) shows capacity to
divide attention between central and peripheral
fields of vision and search effectively in each
Predicts well to accident rates and poor driving tests
Change detection also is an important problem –
seeing something new and different – requires both
attentional scanning + memory comparisons
Worst of all, cell phone use by older drivers led to
poorer detection of critical info like pedestrians in
cross walk during turns!
Practical Issues with Regard to Aging
and Driving
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How should we deal with evidence
that older drivers are more at risk
for certain types of accidents?
Should licensing procedures be
different for older drivers? How?
Training procedures?