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Older adults do not show enhanced benefits from multisensory information on speeded perceptual discrimination tasks

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posted on 2025-03-07, 10:13 authored by Christopher Atkin, Jemaine StaceyJemaine Stacey, Harriet A Allen, Helen Henshaw, Katherine L Roberts, Stephen P Badham

No description suppliedSome research has shown that older adults benefit more from multisensory information than do young adults. However, more recent evidence has shown that the multisensory age benefit varies considerably across tasks. In the current study, older (65 – 80) and young (18 – 30) adults (N = 191) completed a speeded perceptual discrimination task either online or face-to-face to assess task response speed. We examined whether presenting stimuli in multiple sensory modalities (audio-visual) instead of one (audio-only or visual-only) benefits older adults more than young adults. Across all three experiments, a consistent speeding of response was found in the multisensory condition compared to the unisensory conditions for both young and older adults. Furthermore, race model analysis showed a significant multisensory benefit across a broad temporal interval. Critically, there were no significant differences between young and older adults. Taken together, these findings provide strong evidence in favour of a multisensory benefit that does not differ across age groups, contrasting with prior research.

Funding

Evaluating Multisensory Stimuli as a Mechanism to Boost Cognition and Wellbeing in Old Age

Economic and Social Research Council

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Development and feasibility of a behavioural intervention to improve the beneficial use of hearing technology for adults with hearing loss

NIHR Academy

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NIHR Nottingham BRC

National Institute for Health Research

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History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Psychology & Vision Sciences

Published in

Neurobiology of Aging

Volume

142

Pagination

65 - 72

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0197-4580

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-03-07

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Jammy Stacey

Deposit date

2025-02-06

Data Access Statement

The data of the current study are available in the Open Science Framework repository, http://osf.io/m95jx/.

Rights Retention Statement

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