Version 2 2024-10-15, 16:29Version 2 2024-10-15, 16:29
Version 1 2024-04-10, 14:41Version 1 2024-04-10, 14:41
journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-15, 16:29authored byDouglas BarrettDouglas Barrett, Claire Hutchinson, Fengjun Zhang, Hongyu xie, Jingxin Wang
<p>Aging has been associated with significant declines in the speed and accuracy of visual search. These effects have been attributed partly to low-level (bottom-up) factors including reductions in sensory acuity and general processing speed. Aging is also associated with changes in top-down attentional control, but the impact of these on search is less well understood. The current study investigated age-related differences in top-down attentional control by comparing the speed and accuracy of saccadic sampling in the presence and absence of top-down information about target color in young (YA) and older (OA) observers. Displays contained an equal number of red and blue Landholt stimuli. Targets were distinguished from distractors by a unique orientation and observers reported the direction of the target’s gap on each trial. Single-target cues signaled the color of the target with 100% validity. Dual-target cues indicated the target could be present in either colored subgroup. The results revealed reliable group differences in the benefits associated with top-down information on single-compared to dual-target cues. On single-target searches, OA made significantly more saccades than YA to stimuli in the uncued color subset. Single-target cues also produced a smaller advantage in the time taken to fixate the target in OA compared to YA. These results support an age-related decline in observers’ use of top-down information to restrict sequences of saccades to a task-relevant subset of objects during visual search.</p>
History
Author affiliation
College of Life Sciences/Psychology & Vision Sciences