Centre for Speech, Language, and the Brain, Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Psychol Aging. 2010 Dec;25(4):991-1001. doi: 10.1037/a0020117.
Previous research suggests that older adults suffer declines in producing accurate spellings but retain the ability to accurately detect misspellings. The preservation of perception in the face of impaired production has been used to support a model of aging in which age impairs access to linguistic representations under specific circumstances, while representations themselves remain intact. The current research tests two predictions of this Transmission Deficit Hypothesis (TDH): first, that the differential effect of age on perception and production occurs when tasks are equated on response requirements and underlying representations, and second, that both word and spelling frequency interact to determine the effect of age on performance. Results of two error monitoring tasks supported the predictions of the TDH, demonstrating age-related production impairments that interacted with both word and spelling frequency, but no impairment of older adults' spelling perception, even for low frequency words or spellings.
先前的研究表明,老年人在准确拼写方面会出现下降,但仍能准确地发现拼写错误。在生产能力受损的情况下,感知能力的保持被用来支持一种衰老模式,即年龄在特定情况下会损害语言表现的获取能力,而表现本身则保持完整。当前的研究检验了这一传递缺陷假说(TDH)的两个预测:首先,当任务在反应要求和潜在表现上相同时,年龄对感知和生产的差异影响才会出现;其次,词频和拼写频率都会相互作用,决定年龄对表现的影响。两个错误监控任务的结果支持了 TDH 的预测,表明与词频和拼写频率都相互作用的与年龄相关的生产障碍,但老年人的拼写感知能力没有受损,即使是低频词或拼写。