4.5 Review

Age differences in sustained attention tasks: A meta-analysis

Journal

PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW
Volume 28, Issue 6, Pages 1755-1775

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-021-01908-x

Keywords

Sustained attention; Vigilance; SART; Cognitive aging; Go; no-go; Motor inhibition

Funding

  1. Universita degli Studi di Padova within the CRUI-CARE Agreement

Ask authors/readers for more resources

With aging, attention decline in various aspects. Older adults demonstrate slower but more accurate performance in sustained attention tasks compared to younger adults, possibly due to a more prudent strategy that reduces false alarms.
Many aspects of attention decline with aging. There is a current debate on how aging also affects sustained attention. In this study, we contribute to this debate by meta-analytically comparing performance on the go/no-go Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) in younger and older adults. We included only studies in which the SART had a low proportion of no-go trials (5%-30%), there was a random or quasirandom stimulus presentation, and data on both healthy younger and older adults were available. A total of 12 studies were suitable with 832 younger adults and 690 older adults. Results showed that older adults were slower than younger adults on go trials (g = 1, 95% CI [.72, 1.27]) and more accurate than younger adults on no-go trials (g = .59, 95% CI [.32, .85]). Moreover, older adults were slower after a no-go error than younger adults (g = .79, 95% CI [.60, .99]). These results are compatible with an age-related processing speed deficit, mostly suggested by longer go RTs, but also with an increased preference for a prudent strategy, as demonstrated by fewer no-go errors and greater posterror slowing in older adults. An inhibitory deficit account could not explain these findings, as older adults actually outperformed younger adults by producing fewer false alarms to no-go stimuli. These findings point to a more prudent strategy when using attentional resources in aging that allows reducing the false-alarm rate in tasks producing a tendency for automatic responding.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available