Cognitive effort in modality retrieval by young and older adults

A secondary task methodology was used to determine whether the retrieval of modality information is more cognitively effortful for older adults than younger ones. Young (M age = 20 years) and older (M age = 68 years) adults were asked to learn a mixed modality (auditory and visual) list of nouns. Du...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental aging research 1990-03, Vol.16 (1), p.35-41
Hauptverfasser: Mellinger, Jeanne C., Lehman, Elyse Brauch, Happ, Lisa K., Grout, Leslie A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A secondary task methodology was used to determine whether the retrieval of modality information is more cognitively effortful for older adults than younger ones. Young (M age = 20 years) and older (M age = 68 years) adults were asked to learn a mixed modality (auditory and visual) list of nouns. During recall of words and modality, subjects were asked to respond to a randomly presented light signal. Cognitive effort for the primary task (recall) was measured by interference with the signal detection task. Adding a modality identification task to word retrieval did not significantly increase cognitive effort for either age group, although young adults were better at both word and modality recall and word recall itself was more effortful for older adults. Results suggest that age decements in modality learning cannot be explained by greater cognitive effort during retrieval of information about modality.
ISSN:0361-073X
1096-4657
DOI:10.1080/03610739008253872