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Increased Early Processing of Task-Irrelevant Auditory Stimuli in Older Adults

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2016

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Public Library of Science
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Tusch, Erich S., Brittany R. Alperin, Phillip J. Holcomb, and Kirk R. Daffner. 2016. “Increased Early Processing of Task-Irrelevant Auditory Stimuli in Older Adults.” PLoS ONE 11 (11): e0165645. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0165645. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0165645.

Abstract

The inhibitory deficit hypothesis of cognitive aging posits that older adults’ inability to adequately suppress processing of irrelevant information is a major source of cognitive decline. Prior research has demonstrated that in response to task-irrelevant auditory stimuli there is an age-associated increase in the amplitude of the N1 wave, an ERP marker of early perceptual processing. Here, we tested predictions derived from the inhibitory deficit hypothesis that the age-related increase in N1 would be 1) observed under an auditory-ignore, but not auditory-attend condition, 2) attenuated in individuals with high executive capacity (EC), and 3) augmented by increasing cognitive load of the primary visual task. ERPs were measured in 114 well-matched young, middle-aged, young-old, and old-old adults, designated as having high or average EC based on neuropsychological testing. Under the auditory-ignore (visual-attend) task, participants ignored auditory stimuli and responded to rare target letters under low and high load. Under the auditory-attend task, participants ignored visual stimuli and responded to rare target tones. Results confirmed an age-associated increase in N1 amplitude to auditory stimuli under the auditory-ignore but not auditory-attend task. Contrary to predictions, EC did not modulate the N1 response. The load effect was the opposite of expectation: the N1 to task-irrelevant auditory events was smaller under high load. Finally, older adults did not simply fail to suppress the N1 to auditory stimuli in the task-irrelevant modality; they generated a larger response than to identical stimuli in the task-relevant modality. In summary, several of the study’s findings do not fit the inhibitory-deficit hypothesis of cognitive aging, which may need to be refined or supplemented by alternative accounts.

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People and Places, Population Groupings, Age Groups, Biology and Life Sciences, Neuroscience, Sensory Perception, Vision, Psychology, Social Sciences, Cognitive Science, Cognition, Elderly, Bioassays and Physiological Analysis, Electrophysiological Techniques, Brain Electrophysiology, Electroencephalography, Event-Related Potentials, Physiology, Electrophysiology, Neurophysiology, Medicine and Health Sciences, Brain Mapping, Diagnostic Medicine, Clinical Neurophysiology, Imaging Techniques, Neuroimaging, Cognitive Neuroscience, Cognitive Neurology, Neuropsychological Testing, Neurology, Neuropsychology, Developmental Biology, Organism Development, Aging, Physiological Processes, Cognitive Psychology, Attention

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