Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn. 2009 Nov;16(6):745-63. doi: 10.1080/13825580902926846. Epub 2009 Jun 5.
The present study examined whether external support and practice could reduce age differences in oculomotor control. Participants were to avoid fixating an abrupt onset and on some trials, were provided with a predictive cue regarding the onset location or identity. Older adults demonstrated more capture than younger adults, but both groups improved with practice. Whereas the older group benefited from a location preview (Experiment 1), neither group showed less capture when given a preview of the onset object itself (Experiment 2), suggesting that location-based inhibition, but not object-based inhibition, was sufficient to support oculomotor control within this paradigm. To test the generalizability of these skills, displays in a final block were manipulated such that the onset could appear in a different location or be a different object altogether. Viewing patterns were similar for changed vs. unchanged displays, suggesting that participants' practice-related gains could withstand a change in the task materials.
本研究考察了外部支持和练习是否可以减少眼动控制中的年龄差异。参与者需要避免注视突然出现的目标,在某些试验中,他们会得到关于目标出现位置或身份的预测线索。与年轻人相比,老年人更容易出现捕获效应,但两组人在练习后都有所改善。虽然老年人从位置预视中受益(实验 1),但当他们得到目标本身的预视时,两组人都没有减少捕获效应(实验 2),这表明在这种范式中,基于位置的抑制而不是基于物体的抑制足以支持眼动控制。为了检验这些技能的普遍性,最后一组显示被操纵,使得目标可以出现在不同的位置或完全是不同的物体。对于改变和未改变的显示,观察模式相似,这表明参与者的练习相关收益可以承受任务材料的变化。