Age and the Elderly Internal Clock: Further Evidence for a Fundamentally Slowed CNS

Author:

Cann Michael T.1,Vercruyssen Max1,Hancock P. A.2

Affiliation:

1. Human Factors Department, ISSM Laboratory of Attention and Motor Performance, Gerontology University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089–0021

2. Human Factors Research Laboratory, 164 Norris Hall University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Abstract

Earlier studies have found little or no effect for age on the estimation of time. These results may reflect a true independence, or they may be an artifact of a subvocal counting strategy or an automatic and unconscious recalibration process by the elderly that adjusts for a slowed internal clock. These alternatives were examined by requiring subjects to estimate a prescribed time interval either alone or while also engaged in a resource demanding secondary task. The secondary task was assumed to prevent or inhibit the use of a counting strategy and any such recalibration processes from occurring. Thirty-two subjects, consisting of 16 young (mean age = 25 yrs) and 16 old (mean age = 71 yrs) individuals, performed a time estimation task both alone (unfilled interval production, the single-task condition) and while simultaneously counting backwards by threes from a number between 50 and 100 (filled interval production, the dual-task condition). Results indicated that while no age differences existed in interval production during the single-task condition, the older adults significantly overestimated the 10–sec interval during the dual-task condition, compared to the younger subjects. These findings are interpreted in terms of a slowed internal clock in the elderly. Such a slowing of the internal clock may explain a significant portion of the age-related variance in speed of behavior.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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