McKinnon Margaret C, Moscovitch Morris
Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care, Toronto, Ont, Canada.
Cognition. 2007 Feb;102(2):179-218. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2005.12.011. Epub 2006 Feb 14.
Using older adults and dual-task interference, we examined performance on two social reasoning tasks: theory of mind (ToM) tasks and versions of the deontic selection task involving social contracts and hazardous conditions. In line with performance accounts of social reasoning, evidence from both aging and the dual-task method suggested that domain-general resources contribute to performance of these tasks. Specifically, older adults were impaired relative to younger adults on all types of social reasoning tasks tested; performance varied as a function of the demands these tasks placed on domain-general resources. Moreover, in younger adults, simultaneous performance of a working memory task interfered with younger adults' performance on both types of social reasoning tasks; here too, the magnitude of the interference effect varied with the processing demands of each task. Limits placed on social reasoning by executive functions contribute a great deal to performance, even in old age and in healthy younger adults under conditions of divided attention. The role of potentially non-modular and modular contributions to social reasoning is discussed.
我们以老年人和双重任务干扰为研究对象,考察了他们在两项社会推理任务中的表现:心理理论(ToM)任务以及涉及社会契约和危险情况的道义选择任务的不同版本。与社会推理的表现理论相一致,来自衰老研究和双重任务方法的证据表明,领域一般性资源有助于这些任务的表现。具体而言,在所有测试的社会推理任务类型中,老年人相对于年轻人表现受损;表现因这些任务对领域一般性资源的需求而异。此外,在年轻人中,工作记忆任务的同时执行干扰了他们在这两种社会推理任务中的表现;同样,干扰效应的大小也因每项任务的处理需求而异。即使在老年以及注意力分散条件下的健康年轻人中,执行功能对社会推理施加的限制也对表现有很大影响。我们还讨论了潜在的非模块化和模块化因素对社会推理的作用。