Knox Paul C, Liang Dongmei
Department of Eye and Vision Science, Institute of Life Course and Medical Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
School of Physical Education & Sports Science, National Demonstration Centre for Experimental Sports Science Education, South China Normal University, Guangzhou, China.
PeerJ. 2021 Jun 16;9:e11610. doi: 10.7717/peerj.11610. eCollection 2021.
Considerable effort has been made to measure and understand the effects of ageing on inhibitory control using a range of behavioural tasks. In the minimally delayed oculomotor response (MDOR) task, participants are presented with a simple visual target step with variable target display duration (TDD), and instructed to saccade to the target not when it appears (a prosaccade response), but when it disappears (i.e., on target offset). Using this task, we recently found higher error rates and longer latencies for correct responses in older compared to younger participants. Here we have used a modified MDOR task, in which participants were presented with static placeholders identifying potential target positions (increasing spatial information), and three TDDs rather than two (reducing temporal predictability). We found that the yield of analysable trials was generally higher with this modified task and in 28 older (mean ± SD age: 65 ± 7 y) and 25 younger (26 ± 7 y) participants the total overall error rate was again higher in the older group (30 ± 18% vs. 16 ± 11%). An analysis of the temporal distribution of responses demonstrated a pronounced peak in error production around 150 ms (young) or 200 ms (old) after target onset. When we recalculated the error rate focusing on these errors, it was again significantly higher in the older group. The latency of correct responses (to offsets) was significantly increased in the older group, although much of this increase was accounted for by expected age-related visuomotor slowing. However, both latency and distribution data suggested that while older participants could generate increased levels of inhibition, they could not maintain these levels as efficiently as the younger participants. In 24 participants (15 old, 9 young) who completed both versions of the MDOR task, neither latency nor error rates differed significantly between versions. These results confirm an inhibitory control deficit in healthy older participants, and suggest that the dynamics of inhibitory control are also affected by ageing. The modified MDOR task yields more data while not altering basic performance parameters.
人们付出了相当大的努力,通过一系列行为任务来测量和理解衰老对抑制控制的影响。在最小延迟眼动反应(MDOR)任务中,向参与者呈现一个简单的视觉目标步骤,目标显示持续时间(TDD)可变,并指示他们不是在目标出现时(前扫视反应),而是在目标消失时(即目标偏移时)向目标进行扫视。使用这个任务,我们最近发现与年轻参与者相比,年长参与者正确反应的错误率更高,潜伏期更长。在这里,我们使用了一种改良的MDOR任务,其中向参与者呈现识别潜在目标位置的静态占位符(增加空间信息),以及三个TDD而不是两个(降低时间可预测性)。我们发现,使用这种改良任务时,可分析试验的产量通常更高,在28名年长参与者(平均±标准差年龄:65±7岁)和25名年轻参与者(26±7岁)中,年长组的总总体错误率再次更高(30±18%对16±11%)。对反应时间分布的分析表明,在目标开始后约150毫秒(年轻)或200毫秒(年长)左右,错误产生出现了明显的峰值。当我们重新计算关注这些错误的错误率时,年长组再次显著更高。年长组正确反应(对偏移)的潜伏期显著增加,尽管这种增加的很大一部分是由预期的与年龄相关的视觉运动减慢所导致的。然而,潜伏期和分布数据都表明,虽然年长参与者可以产生更高水平的抑制,但他们不能像年轻参与者那样有效地维持这些水平。在完成两个版本MDOR任务的24名参与者(15名年长,9名年轻)中,两个版本之间的潜伏期和错误率均无显著差异。这些结果证实了健康年长参与者存在抑制控制缺陷,并表明抑制控制的动态过程也受到衰老的影响。改良的MDOR任务在不改变基本性能参数的情况下产生了更多数据。