Author:
KEYS BETH A.,WHITE DESIRÉE A.
Abstract
Age-related declines in executive abilities have been
widely reported and are thought to result from neuropathological
changes in the prefrontal cortex. Some investigators have
suggested that age-related changes in cognition may be
the result of slowed information processing speed rather
than declines in specific cognitive abilities. We examined
the relationships among age, executive abilities, and psychomotor
speed in 40 older adults and 46 young adults. Both verbal
and nonverbal tasks were administered that measured 2 aspects
of executive ability: set formation and set shifting. Executive
and psychomotor speed tasks were paired based on similarities
in basic task demands. Our results revealed that poorer
executive performance was associated with increasing age.
Further, although psychomotor speed attenuated the relationship,
age accounted for a unique and significant proportion of
variance in executive performance after controlling for
psychomotor speed. These results suggest that age has an
effect on prefrontally mediated executive abilities that
cannot be explained solely in terms of psychomotor slowing.
(JINS, 2000, 6, 76–82.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
88 articles.
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