Bherer Louis, Kramer Arthur F, Peterson Matthew S, Colcombe Stanley, Erickson Kirk, Becic Ensar
Department of Psychology, University of Quebec at Montreal, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
Psychol Aging. 2005 Dec;20(4):695-709. doi: 10.1037/0882-7974.20.4.695.
A number of studies have suggested that attentional control skills required to perform 2 tasks concurrently become impaired with age (A. A. Hartley, 1992; J. M. McDowd & R. J. Shaw, 2000). A. A. Hartley (2001) recently observed that the age-related differences in dual-task performance were larger when the 2 tasks required similar motor responses. The present study examined the extent to which age-related deficits in dual-task performance or time sharing--in particular, dual-task performance of 2 discrimination tasks with similar motor requirements--can be moderated by training. The results indicate that, even when the 2 tasks required similar motor responses, both older and younger adults could learn to perform the tasks faster and more accurately. Moreover, the improvement in performance generalized to new task combinations involving new stimuli. Therefore, it appears that training can substantially improve dual-task processing skills in older adults.
多项研究表明,同时执行两项任务所需的注意力控制技能会随着年龄增长而受损(A. A. 哈特利,1992年;J. M. 麦克道和R. J. 肖,2000年)。A. A. 哈特利(2001年)最近观察到,当两项任务需要相似的运动反应时,双任务表现中与年龄相关的差异会更大。本研究考察了双任务表现或时间共享方面与年龄相关的缺陷——特别是两项具有相似运动要求的辨别任务的双任务表现——在多大程度上可以通过训练得到缓解。结果表明,即使两项任务需要相似的运动反应,老年人和年轻人都能够学会更快、更准确地完成任务。此外,表现的提高还推广到了涉及新刺激的新任务组合中。因此,训练似乎可以显著提高老年人的双任务处理技能。