Affiliation:
1. Doctoral School in the Social Sciences, Jagiellonian University, 30-010 Cracow, Poland
2. Institute of Psychology, Jagiellonian University, 30-060 Cracow, Poland
3. Department of Research and Design, Medicine Economy Law Society (MELS) Foundation, 30-040 Cracow, Poland
Abstract
The effect of natural aging on physiologic mechanisms that regulate attentional set-shifting represents an area of high interest in the study of cognitive function. In visual discrimination learning, reward contingency changes in categorization tasks impact individual performance, which is constrained by attention-shifting costs. Perseveration (PE) and learned irrelevance (LI) are viewed as two different mechanisms that shape responses to stimuli, which are predicated on the shift in stimulus form. To date, only studies examining patients with Parkinson’s disease have provided some insight into the relationship between individual age and performance in PE and LI tasks. We enrolled 60 healthy individuals (mean [SD] age, 63.0 [12.6]) without a history of dementia, a cerebrovascular incident, or a neurodegenerative disease. No association was observed between crystallized intelligence or verbal fluency scores and reaction time in both PE (r = 0.074, p = 0.603; r = −0.124, p = 0.346) and LI (r = −0.076, p = 0.562; r = −0.081, p = 0.536) task conditions, respectively. In contrast, a statistically significant linear relationship was observed between age and reaction time (RT) for PE (r = 0.259, p = 0.046) but not for LI (r = 0.226, p = 0.083). No significant linear relationship was observed for changing RTs in PE and LI (r = 0.209, p = 0.110). The present study is the first report that provides a descriptive overview of age-related differences in PE and LI in a sample of cognitively unimpaired middle- to older-aged adults.
Funder
The National Science Centre, Poland
Reference73 articles.
1. Contrasting Mechanisms of Impaired Attentional Set-Shifting in Patients with Frontal Lobe Damage or Parkinson’s Disease;Owen;Brain J. Neurol.,1993
2. Learning to Be Inflexible: Enhanced Attentional Biases in Parkinson’s Disease;Fallon;Cortex J. Devoted Study Nerv. Syst. Behav.,2016
3. Gruszka, A., Hampshire, A., and Owen, A. (2010). Handbook of Individual Differences in Cognition, Springer.
4. Learned Irrelevance and Response Perseveration in a Total Change Dimensional Shift Task;Maes;Brain Cogn.,2006
5. The Role of Learned Irrelevance in Attentional Set-Shifting Impairments in Parkinson’s Disease;Slabosz;Neuropsychology,2006