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Aging effects in cueing tasks as assessed by the ideal observer: peripheral cues.

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posted on 2016-12-14, 16:06 authored by Eleanor F. Swan, Claire V. Hutchinson, Mark Everard, Steven S. Shimozaki
Previous aging and cueing studies suggest that automatic orienting driven by peripheral cues is preserved with aging; however, inconsistencies can be found. One issue might be the use of response times (RT) to assess cueing effects (invalid RT--valid RT), which, in many cases, may not have clear quantitative predictions. We propose an ideal observer (IO) analysis of accuracy estimating participants' internal value of cue validity, or weight, which should equal the actual cue validity. The weight measures the use of information provided by the cue and is insensitive to variations in set size and difficulty, thus potentially providing advantages to RT. Older (n = 54) and younger (n = 58) participants performed a yes/no detection task of a two-dimensional (2-D) Gaussian (60 ms). Square peripheral precues (150 ms) indicated likely target locations (70% valid) across two or six locations (set sizes). For cueing effects, (valid--invalid hit rates), younger participants had set-size effects (larger cueing effects for set size 6), while older participants did not. The opposite pattern was found for weights (younger: no set-size effects, older: set-size effects) due to the IO predicting larger cueing effects for larger set sizes. Comparisons to the ideal weight (cue validity) suggested that older participants used the cue information effectively with set size 2 (as or more so than younger participants), but not with set size 6. These results suggest that attentional deficits from aging in peripheral cueing tasks may only arise as difficulty increases, such as larger set sizes.

Funding

Funding for this study was provided by the Postgraduate Research Fund, School of Psychology, University of Leicester; and the Seed Corn Fund, School of Psychology, University of Leicester.

History

Citation

Journal of Vision, February 2015 15(2):5, 1–18

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/MBSP Non-Medical Departments/Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Vision

Publisher

Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)

issn

1534-7362

eissn

1534-7362

Available date

2016-12-14

Publisher version

http://jov.arvojournals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2213269

Notes

Parts of this study have been presented previously at the Applied Vision Association Conference, May 2012, Cambridge, UK.

Language

en

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