Arora Catherine, Frantz Carina, Toglia Joan
Department of Occupational Therapy, School of Health and Natural Sciences, Mercy College, Dobbs Ferry, NY, United States.
School of Health and Natural Sciences, Mercy College, Dobbs Ferry, NY, United States.
Front Psychol. 2021 Nov 5;12:753016. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.753016. eCollection 2021.
As people age, their cognitive skills and ability to complete complex instrumental activities of daily living often decline in subtle ways. Older adults who are aware of these slight cognitive and functional changes spontaneously adapt and implement strategies to maximize performance. On the other hand, older adults with limited self-awareness are less likely to adjust performance or initiate compensatory strategies as they may not recognize the need to do so. This places them at higher risk of functional decline and loss of independence. Research on awareness of functional performance in healthy adults is, however, limited, and there is a paucity of assessment tools available to address questions of awareness and strategy use in functional tasks. We used the Weekly Calendar Planning Activity (WCPA) - a performance-based assessment of functional cognition including measures of awareness and strategy use - to investigate differences in performance, awareness, and strategy use across the adult lifespan. The WCPA requires examinees to schedule appointments into a weekly calendar while following rules designed to increase task demands. Healthy adults (=342) from ages 18-92 were observed for strategy use and error recognition, while a post-test interview probed participants' reported strategy use and estimation of accuracy. The discrepancy between participant estimation and actual accuracy provided a measure of online awareness of performance where a larger estimation discrepancy indicated over-estimation of performance. Performance on the WCPA declined across the adult lifespan. Older adults were less likely to use self-monitoring strategies and used less effective strategies overall. Overestimation was associated with use of fewer strategies and lower accuracy in all age groups. Importantly, twice as many older adults overestimated compared to younger adults. Furthermore, the subset of older adults who had good awareness of performance was more likely to use effective strategies, to recognize errors, and achieved accuracy on par with their younger counterparts. Our results emphasize the importance of examining self-awareness of performance and analyzing the strategies used to perform a complex functional task. This information can provide a foundation for early detection of functional decline in aging and for designing interventions to maximize functional independence in aging.
随着人们年龄的增长,他们的认知技能以及完成复杂的日常生活工具性活动的能力常常会以微妙的方式下降。意识到这些轻微认知和功能变化的老年人会自发地进行调整并实施策略,以实现最佳表现。另一方面,自我意识有限的老年人不太可能调整表现或启动补偿策略,因为他们可能没有意识到这样做的必要性。这使他们面临功能衰退和失去独立性的更高风险。然而,关于健康成年人功能表现意识的研究有限,并且缺乏用于解决功能任务中意识和策略使用问题的评估工具。我们使用了每周日历规划活动(WCPA)——一种基于表现的功能认知评估,包括对意识和策略使用的测量——来研究成年人整个生命周期中在表现、意识和策略使用方面的差异。WCPA要求受试者在遵循旨在增加任务难度的规则的同时,将预约安排到每周日历中。观察了年龄在18 - 92岁之间的342名健康成年人的策略使用和错误识别情况,同时通过测试后的访谈探究参与者报告的策略使用情况以及对准确性的估计。参与者估计与实际准确性之间的差异提供了对表现的在线意识的一种衡量,其中估计差异越大表明对表现的高估程度越高。WCPA的表现随着成年人整个生命周期而下降。老年人使用自我监控策略的可能性较小,总体上使用的策略效果也较差。在所有年龄组中,高估与使用较少的策略以及较低的准确性相关。重要的是,高估的老年人数量是年轻人的两倍。此外,对表现有良好意识的老年人群体更有可能使用有效的策略、识别错误,并取得与年轻同龄人相当的准确性。我们的研究结果强调了检查表现的自我意识以及分析用于执行复杂功能任务的策略的重要性。这些信息可以为早期发现衰老过程中的功能衰退以及设计干预措施以最大限度地提高老年人的功能独立性提供基础。