A reassessment of negative priming within the inhibition framework of cognitive aging: there is more in it than previously believed

Experimental Aging Research
Cora TitzMarcus Hasselhorn

Abstract

Three negative-priming studies were carried out to examine whether this paradigm allows a separation of the effects of aging on access, deletion, and restraint control of inhibition. In each study 24 younger (18 to 35 years old) and 24 older (57 to 82 years old) adults were asked to identify pictures. The results reveal difficulties among older adults in preventing the access of distracting perceptual input into responses; however, the ability to restrain inappropriate answers and the ability to delete once-relevant information are not affected by age.

References

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Citations

Jun 16, 2010·Psychology and Aging·Cora Titz, Paul Verhaeghen
Oct 19, 2011·Psychology and Aging·Ellen RozekJoan McDowd
Mar 20, 2012·PloS One·Hecke SchrobsdorffMarcus Hasselhorn
Apr 29, 2015·Psychonomic Bulletin & Review·Christian FringsElaine Fox
Nov 26, 2010·Experimental Psychology·Matthias IhrkeMarcus Hasselhorn
Jul 8, 2014·Frontiers in Psychology·Matthias MittnerMarcus Hasselhorn
Apr 1, 2014·Neuropsychology, Development, and Cognition. Section B, Aging, Neuropsychology and Cognition·Julia Groß, Ute J Bayen
Feb 13, 2015·Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research : JSLHR·Rebecca Hunting PomponDiane L Kendall

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