Houston James R, Bennett Ilana J, Allen Philip A, Madden David J
a Department of Psychology , The University of Akron , Akron , Ohio , USA.
b Department of Neurobiology and Behavior , University of California , Irvine , Irvine California , USA.
Exp Aging Res. 2016;42(3):221-63. doi: 10.1080/0361073X.2016.1156964.
BACKGROUND/STUDY CONTEXT: Declining visual capacities in older adults have been posited as a driving force behind adult age differences in higher-order cognitive functions (e.g., the "common cause" hypothesis of Lindenberger & Baltes, 1994, Psychology and Aging, 9, 339-355). McGowan, Patterson, and Jordan (2013, Experimental Aging Research, 39, 70-79) also found that a surprisingly large number of published cognitive aging studies failed to include adequate measures of visual acuity. However, a recent meta-analysis of three studies (La Fleur and Salthouse, 2014, Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 21, 1202-1208) failed to find evidence that visual acuity moderated or mediated age differences in higher-level cognitive processes. In order to provide a more extensive test of whether visual acuity moderates age differences in higher-level cognitive processes, we conducted a more extensive meta-analysis of topic.
Using results from 456 studies, we calculated effect sizes for the main effect of age across four cognitive domains (attention, executive function, memory, and perception/language) separately for five levels of visual acuity criteria (no criteria, undisclosed criteria, self-reported acuity, 20/80-20/31, and 20/30 or better).
As expected, age had a significant effect on each cognitive domain. However, these age effects did not further differ as a function of visual acuity criteria.
The current meta-analytic, cross-sectional results suggest that visual acuity is not significantly related to age group differences in higher-level cognitive performance-thereby replicating La Fleur and Salthouse (2014). Further efforts are needed to determine whether other measures of visual functioning (e.g., contrast sensitivity, luminance) affect age differences in cognitive functioning.
背景/研究背景:老年人视觉能力下降被认为是高阶认知功能出现成人年龄差异的一个驱动因素(例如,林登伯格和巴尔特斯1994年提出的“共同原因”假说,《心理学与衰老》,第9卷,第339 - 355页)。麦高恩、帕特森和乔丹(2013年,《实验性衰老研究》,第39卷,第70 - 79页)也发现,大量已发表的认知衰老研究竟然没有纳入足够的视力测量指标。然而,最近对三项研究的荟萃分析(拉弗勒和萨尔托斯,2014年,《心理onomic通报与评论》,第21卷,第1202 - 1208页)未能找到证据表明视力调节或介导了高阶认知过程中的年龄差异。为了更广泛地检验视力是否调节高阶认知过程中的年龄差异,我们对该主题进行了更广泛的荟萃分析。
利用456项研究的结果,我们分别针对五个视力标准水平(无标准、未披露标准、自我报告的视力、20/80 - 20/31以及20/30或更好),计算了四个认知领域(注意力、执行功能、记忆和感知/语言)中年龄主效应的效应量。
正如预期的那样,年龄对每个认知领域都有显著影响。然而,这些年龄效应并没有因视力标准而进一步有所不同。
当前的荟萃分析横断面结果表明,视力与高阶认知表现中的年龄组差异没有显著关系——从而重复了拉弗勒和萨尔托斯(2014年)的研究结果。需要进一步努力来确定视觉功能的其他测量指标(例如,对比敏感度、亮度)是否会影响认知功能中的年龄差异。