When and Why Do Old Adults Outsource Control to the Environment?

被引:14
|
作者
Mayr, Ulrich [1 ]
Spieler, Daniel H. [2 ]
Hutcheon, Thomas G. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oregon, Sch Psychol, Eugene, OR 97403 USA
[2] Georgia Inst Technol, Sch Psychol, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA
关键词
executive control; strategies; AGE-DIFFERENCES; COGNITIVE CONTROL; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; SELECTION; CONFIDENCE; MECHANISMS;
D O I
10.1037/a0039466
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学]; R592 [老年病学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100203 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Old adults' tendency to rely on information present in the environment rather than internal representations has been frequently noted, but is not well understood. The fade-out paradigm provides a useful model situation to study this internal-to-external shift across the life span: Subjects need to transition from an initial, cued task-switching phase to a fade-out phase where only 1 task remains relevant. Old adults exhibit large response-time "fade-out costs," mainly because they continue to consult the task cues. Here we show that age differences in fade-out costs remain very large even when we insert between the task-switching and the fade-out phase 20 single-task trials without task cues (during which even old adults' performance becomes highly fluent; Experiment 1), but costs in old adults are eliminated when presenting an on-screen instruction to focus on the 1 remaining task at the transition point between the task-switching and fade-out phase (Experiment 2). Furthermore, old adults, but not young adults, also exhibited " fade-in costs" when they were instructed to perform an initial single-task phase that would be followed by the cued task-switching phase (Experiment 3). Combined, these results show that old adults' tendency to overutilize external support is not a problem of perseverating earlier-relevant control settings. Instead, old adults seem less likely to initiate the necessary reconfiguration process when transitioning from 1 phase to the next because they use underspecified task models that lack the higher-level distinction between those contexts that do and that do not require external support.
引用
收藏
页码:624 / 633
页数:10
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