Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Rochester, Box 603, Rochester, NY 14642-8603, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2012 Dec;223(4):441-55. doi: 10.1007/s00221-012-3270-x. Epub 2012 Oct 14.
A common complaint of the elderly is difficulty identifying and localizing auditory and visual sources, particularly in competing background noise. Spatial errors in the elderly may pose challenges and even threats to self and others during everyday activities, such as localizing sounds in a crowded room or driving in traffic. In this study, we investigated the influence of aging, spatial memory, and ocular fixation on the localization of auditory, visual, and combined auditory-visual (bimodal) targets. Head-restrained young and elderly subjects localized targets in a dark, echo-attenuated room using a manual laser pointer. Localization accuracy and precision (repeatability) were quantified for both ongoing and transient (remembered) targets at response delays up to 10 s. Because eye movements bias auditory spatial perception, localization was assessed under target fixation (eyes free, pointer guided by foveal vision) and central fixation (eyes fixed straight ahead, pointer guided by peripheral vision) conditions. Spatial localization across the frontal field in young adults demonstrated (1) horizontal overshoot and vertical undershoot for ongoing auditory targets under target fixation conditions, but near-ideal horizontal localization with central fixation; (2) accurate and precise localization of ongoing visual targets guided by foveal vision under target fixation that degraded when guided by peripheral vision during central fixation; (3) overestimation in horizontal central space (±10°) of remembered auditory, visual, and bimodal targets with increasing response delay. In comparison with young adults, elderly subjects showed (1) worse precision in most paradigms, especially when localizing with peripheral vision under central fixation; (2) greatly impaired vertical localization of auditory and bimodal targets; (3) increased horizontal overshoot in the central field for remembered visual and bimodal targets across response delays; (4) greater vulnerability to visual bias with bimodal stimuli. Results highlight age-, memory-, and modality-dependent deterioration in the processing of auditory and visual space, as well as an age-related increase in the dominance of vision when localizing bimodal sources.
老年人常见的抱怨是难以识别和定位听觉和视觉声源,尤其是在存在竞争背景噪声的情况下。在日常生活活动中,老年人的空间定位错误可能会对自身和他人构成挑战,甚至威胁,例如在嘈杂的房间中定位声音或在交通中驾驶。在这项研究中,我们研究了衰老、空间记忆和眼球固定对听觉、视觉和听觉-视觉联合(双模态)目标定位的影响。头部固定的年轻和老年受试者在黑暗、回声衰减的房间中使用手动激光笔定位目标。在响应延迟高达 10 秒的情况下,对持续和瞬态(记忆)目标的定位准确性和精度(可重复性)进行了量化。由于眼球运动会影响听觉空间感知,因此在目标固定(眼睛自由,指针由中央凹视觉引导)和中央固定(眼睛直视前方,指针由周边视觉引导)条件下评估了定位。在年轻成年人的额前区域内进行的空间定位显示:(1)在目标固定条件下,持续听觉目标存在水平超前和垂直滞后,但在中央固定时接近理想的水平定位;(2)在目标固定时,由中央凹视觉引导的持续视觉目标的准确和精确定位,当在中央固定时由周边视觉引导时会恶化;(3)随着响应延迟的增加,记忆中的听觉、视觉和双模态目标在水平中央空间(±10°)中的估计值增大。与年轻成年人相比,老年受试者表现出:(1)在大多数范式中精度较差,尤其是在中央固定时用周边视觉定位时;(2)听觉和双模态目标的垂直定位严重受损;(3)随着响应延迟的增加,记忆中的视觉和双模态目标在中央视野中的水平超前增加;(4)在双模态刺激下,对视觉偏差的敏感性增加。结果突出了听觉和视觉空间处理的年龄、记忆和模态依赖性恶化,以及在定位双模态源时,视觉的主导地位随年龄增长而增加。