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1.
Neuropsychology ; 15(4): 626-37, 2001 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11761052

ABSTRACT

Previous studies of associative encoding that used explicit retrieval tasks have shown both age- and dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT)-related declines, but such results may be biased by group differences in explicit retrieval. In the present experiment, the authors assessed implicit associative encoding for 25 younger adults (ages 18-25), 73 healthy older adults (ages 59-91), and 65 adults with DAT (ages 59-91) during a speeded word-naming task using an episodic priming measure. Episodic priming refers to the facilitation in responding to a target word after repetition of both words in a prime-target pair, in comparison with simple repetition of the target word with a new prime on each presentation. In contrast with other studies of implicit associative encoding that did not use an implicit episodic priming measure, the present study found both age- and DAT-related declines in associative encoding under conditions of massed learning trials.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease/psychology , Attention , Mental Recall , Paired-Associate Learning , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Psychometrics , Reference Values
2.
Psychol Aging ; 15(2): 225-31, 2000 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10879577

ABSTRACT

The present study examined age differences in the influence of 3 factors that previous research has shown to influence word-naming performance. The influence of word frequency, orthographic length, and orthographic neighborhood measures was examined using large-scale regression analyses on the naming latencies for 2,820 words. Thirty-one younger adults and 29 older adults named all of these words, and age differences in the influence of these factors were examined. The results revealed that all 3 factors predicted reliable amounts of variance in word-naming latencies for both groups. However, older adults showed a larger influence of word frequency and reduced influences of orthographic length and orthographic neighborhood density compared with younger adults. Overall, these results suggest that lexical level factors increase in influence in older adults whereas sublexical factors decrease in influence.


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Linguistics , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Cognition , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Processes
3.
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform ; 26(2): 506-26, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10811160

ABSTRACT

The present research examines the nature of the interference effects in a number of selective attention tasks. All of these tasks result in interference in performance by presenting information that is irrelevant to task performance but competes for selection. The interference from this competing information slows the response time (RT) of participants relative to a condition where the competition is minimized. The authors use a convolution of an exponential and a Gaussian (ex-Gaussian) distribution to examine the influence of interference on the characteristics of RT distributions. Consistent with previous research, the authors show that interference in the Stroop task is reflected by both the Gaussian and exponential portions of the ex-Gaussian. In contrast, in 4 experiments they show that several other interference tasks evidence interference that is reflected only in the Gaussian portion of the ex-Gaussian distribution. The authors suggest that these differences reflect the operation of different selection mechanisms, and they examine how sequential sampling models accommodate these effects.


Subject(s)
Attention , Color Perception , Reaction Time , Semantics , Adolescent , Adult , Discrimination Learning , Female , Humans , Male , Normal Distribution
4.
Psychol Bull ; 125(6): 777-99, 1999 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10589302

ABSTRACT

Research on group differences in response latency often has as its goal the detection of Group x Treatment interactions. However, accumulating evidence suggests that response latencies for different groups are often linearly related, leading to an increased likelihood of finding spurious overadditive interactions in which the slower group produces a larger treatment effect. The authors propose a rate-amount model that predicts linear relationships between individuals and that includes global processing parameters based on large-scale group differences in information processing. These global processing parameters may be used to linearly transform response latencies from different individuals to a common information-processing scale so that small-scale group differences in information processing may be isolated. The authors recommend linear regression and z-score transformations that may be used to augment traditional analyses of raw response latencies.


Subject(s)
Group Processes , Mental Processes , Reaction Time , Adult , Aged , Aging/psychology , Bias , Humans , Individuality , Judgment , Middle Aged
5.
J Exp Psychol Gen ; 128(1): 32-55, 1999 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10100390

ABSTRACT

Response time (RT) distributions obtained from 3 word recognition experiments were analyzed by fitting an ex-Gaussian function to the empirical data to determine the main effects and interactive influences of word frequency, repetition, and lexicality on the nature of the underlying distributions. The ex-Gaussian analysis allows one to determine if a manipulation simply shifts the response time (RT) distribution, produces a skewing of the RT distribution, or both. In contrast to naming performance, the lexical decision results indicated that the main effects and interactions of word frequency, repetition, and lexicality primarily reflect increased skewing of the RT distributions, as opposed to simple shifts of the RT distributions. The implications of the results were interpreted within a hybrid 2-stage model of lexical decision performance.


Subject(s)
Memory , Reading , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Humans , Models, Psychological , Normal Distribution , Psycholinguistics , Reaction Time , Semantics
6.
Psychol Rev ; 105(1): 174-87, 1998 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9450376

ABSTRACT

The J. D. Cohen, K. Dunbar, and J. L. McClelland (1990) model of Stroop task performance is used to model data from a study by D. H. Spielder, D. A. Balota, and M. E. Faust (1996). The results indicate that the model fails to capture overall differences between word reading and color naming latencies when set size is increased beyond 2 response alternatives. Further empirical evidence is presented that suggests that the influence of increasing response set size in Stroop task performance is to increase the difference between overall color naming and word reading, which is in direct opposition to the decrease produced by the Cohen et al. architecture. Although the Cohen et al. model provides a useful description of meaning-level interference effects, the qualitative differences between word reading and color naming preclude a model that uses identical architectures for each process, such as that of Cohen et al., to fully capture performance in the Stroop task.


Subject(s)
Attention , Models, Psychological , Aged , Alzheimer Disease/psychology , Color , Humans , Reaction Time , Reading
7.
Psychol Aging ; 11(4): 607-20, 1996 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9000293

ABSTRACT

Two experiments investigated age differences in the encoding of associative information during a speeded naming task. In both experiments, semantically unrelated prime-target word pairs were presented 4 times, in either massed or spaced fashion, during the learning phase. An immediate or delayed test trial was presented following the fourth presentation. In Experiment 1, participants named both the primes and the targets. Younger and older adults showed similar benefits when naming targets that were part of a consistent prime-target pairing compared with targets presented with different primes at each presentation. In Experiment 2, participants named only the target word. Younger adults showed a benefit for consistently paired words, whereas older adults showed no benefit for consistently paired words. The results of the test trials showed a greater benefit for massed repeated words than for spaced repeated words at the immediate test and a reversed pattern at the delayed test. This spacing by test delay interaction was evident in response latency in Experiment 1 and in cued recall performance in Experiment 2.


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Attention , Mental Recall , Paired-Associate Learning , Adult , Aged , Female , Geriatric Assessment , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Reaction Time , Reference Values , Students/psychology
8.
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform ; 22(2): 461-79, 1996 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8934854

ABSTRACT

Components of the Stroop task were examined to investigate the role that inhibitory processes play in cognitive changes in healthy older adults and in individuals with dementia of the Alzheimer's type (DAT). Inhibitory breakdowns should result in an increase in Stroop interference. The results indicate that older adults show a disproportionate increase in interference compared with younger adults. DAT individuals show interference proportionate to older adults but a disproportionate increase in facilitation for congruent color-word trials, and an increased intrusion of word naming on incongruent color naming trials. An ex-Gaussian analysis of response time distributions indicated that the increased interference observed in older adults was due to an increase in the tail of the distribution. Application of the process dissociation analysis of the Stroop task (D.S. Lindsay & L.L. Jacoby, 1994) indicated that older adults showed increased word process estimates, whereas DAT individuals showed differences in both color and word process estimates. Taken together, the results are consistent with an inhibitory breakdown in normal aging and an accelerated breakdown in inhibition in DAT individuals.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease/psychology , Attention , Color Perception , Discrimination Learning , Inhibition, Psychological , Reading , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Reaction Time , Semantics
9.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 19(1): 95-114, 1993 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8423436

ABSTRACT

Previous research (Radvansky & Zacks, 1991) has shown that the fan effect is mediated not by the number of nominal associations paired with a concept but by the number of mental models into which related concepts are organized. Specifically, newly learned "facts" about different objects in one location are integrated into a single mental model and no fan effect is produced, whereas facts about one object in different locations are not integrated and a fan effect is produced. In 6 experiments we investigated several factors' influence on location-based organization preferences. We found no impact of either article type (definite or indefinite) or object transportability. However, animate sentence subjects (people) reduced preference for location-based organizations. A clear person-based organization emerged by using locations that typically contain only a single person (e.g., phone booth) to make location-based situations less plausible.


Subject(s)
Cognition , Memory , Adult , Concept Formation , Female , Humans , Language , Male , Models, Psychological , Reaction Time
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