4 research outputs found
Effect of age on the orientation of attention: effect of changing the interval between signal and stimulus
The purpose of the experiment was to examine the effect of aging on spatial attention. One of two possible locations, horizontally arranged, was cued. The subject had to respond to the onset of a visual stimulus, wherever it appeared. The task demand was to orient attention to the stimulated location before producing a response, or to reorient it if the position is not the cued one. Younger and older adults showed the same response pattern, despite the overall slowing down of response presented by the latter
Effects of age on orientation of attention
The present experiment investigated the influence of age on the magnitude of attentional effects. Subjects were cued to attend to one of two possible stimulus locations horizontally arranged. The instructions were to respond as fast as possible to the occurrence of a visual stimulus, regardless of whether it occurred in a cued or in a non-cued location. When the stimulus occurred in a non-cued location, the subject had to reorient attention to the non-attended, but stimulated, location. Reorienting of attention was directed toward either the left or the right side. The results showed that for the elders, time for reorienting was longer than for younger subjects