Stimulus Specific to Age-Related Audio-Visual Integration in Discrimination Tasks

Author:

Ren Yanna1ORCID,Xu Zhihan,Lu Sa2,Wang Tao3,Yang Weiping4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, College of Humanities and Management, Guizhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Guiyang, China

2. Department of Foreign Language, Ningbo University of Technology, Zhejiang, China

3. Department of Light and Chemical Engineering, Guizhou Light Industry Technical College, Guiyang, China

4. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Education, Hubei University, Wuhan, China

Abstract

Age-related audio-visual integration (AVI) has been investigated extensively; however, AVI ability is either enhanced or reduced with ageing, and this matter is still controversial because of the lack of systematic investigations. To remove possible variates, 26 older adults and 26 younger adults were recruited to conduct meaningless and semantic audio-visual discrimination tasks to assess the ageing effect of AVI systematically. The results for the mean response times showed a significantly faster response to the audio-visual (AV) target than that to the auditory (A) or visual (V) target and a significantly faster response to all targets by the younger adults than that by the older adults (A, V, and AV) in all conditions. In addition, a further comparison of the differences between the probability of audio-visual cumulative distributive functions (CDFs) and race model CDFs showed delayed AVI effects and a longer time window for AVI in older adults than that in younger adults in all conditions. The AVI effect was lower in older adults than that in younger adults during simple meaningless image discrimination (63.0 ms vs. 108.8 ms), but the findings were inverse during semantic image discrimination (310.3 ms vs. 127.2 ms). In addition, there was no significant difference between older and younger adults during semantic character discrimination (98.1 ms vs. 117.2 ms). These results suggested that AVI ability was impaired in older adults, but a compensatory mechanism was established for processing sematic audio-visual stimuli.

Funder

Innovation and Entrepreneurship Project for High-level Overseas Talent of Guizhou Province

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Doctoral Scientific Research Starting Foundation of the Guizhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Humanity and Social Science Youth Foundation of the Ministry of Education of China

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Ophthalmology

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