Age-related alterations in inhibitory control investigated using the minimally delayed oculomotor response task

Healthy, older adults are widely reported to experience cognitive decline, including impairments in inhibitory control. However, this general proposition has recently come under scrutiny because ageing effects are highly variable between individuals, are task dependent, and are sometimes not disting...

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Main Authors: Paul C. Knox, Nikitha Pasunuru
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-01-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/8401.pdf
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spelling doaj-252645f80a2845f5ac5e1305b4e046bb2020-11-25T01:57:46ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-01-018e840110.7717/peerj.8401Age-related alterations in inhibitory control investigated using the minimally delayed oculomotor response taskPaul C. KnoxNikitha PasunuruHealthy, older adults are widely reported to experience cognitive decline, including impairments in inhibitory control. However, this general proposition has recently come under scrutiny because ageing effects are highly variable between individuals, are task dependent, and are sometimes not distinguished from general age-related slowing. We recently developed the minimally delayed oculomotor response (MDOR) task in which participants are presented with a simple visual target step, and instructed to saccade not to the target when it appears (a prosaccade response), but when it disappears (i.e. on target offset). Varying the target display duration (TDD) prevents offset timing being predictable from the time of target onset, and saccades prior to the offset are counted as errors. A comparison of MDOR task performance in a group of 22 older adults (mean age 62 years, range 50–72 years) with that in a group of 39 younger adults (22 years, range 19–27 years) demonstrated that MDOR latency was significantly increased in the older group by 34–68 ms depending on TDD. However, when MDOR latencies were corrected by subtracting the latency observed in a standard prosaccade task, the latency difference between groups was abolished. There was a larger latency modulation with TDD in the older group which was observed even when their generally longer latencies were taken into account. Error rates were significantly increased in the older group. An analysis of the timing distribution of errors demonstrated that most errors were failures to inhibit responses to target onsets. When error distributions were used to isolate clear inhibition failures from other types of error, the older group still exhibited significantly higher error rates as well as a higher residual error rate. Although MDOR latency in older participants may largely reflect a general slowing in the oculomotor system with age, both the latency modulation and error rate results are consistent with an age-related inhibitory control deficit. How this relates to performance on other inhibitory control tasks remains to be investigated.https://peerj.com/articles/8401.pdfSaccadeInhibitionAgeingLatency
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul C. Knox
Nikitha Pasunuru
spellingShingle Paul C. Knox
Nikitha Pasunuru
Age-related alterations in inhibitory control investigated using the minimally delayed oculomotor response task
PeerJ
Saccade
Inhibition
Ageing
Latency
author_facet Paul C. Knox
Nikitha Pasunuru
author_sort Paul C. Knox
title Age-related alterations in inhibitory control investigated using the minimally delayed oculomotor response task
title_short Age-related alterations in inhibitory control investigated using the minimally delayed oculomotor response task
title_full Age-related alterations in inhibitory control investigated using the minimally delayed oculomotor response task
title_fullStr Age-related alterations in inhibitory control investigated using the minimally delayed oculomotor response task
title_full_unstemmed Age-related alterations in inhibitory control investigated using the minimally delayed oculomotor response task
title_sort age-related alterations in inhibitory control investigated using the minimally delayed oculomotor response task
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Healthy, older adults are widely reported to experience cognitive decline, including impairments in inhibitory control. However, this general proposition has recently come under scrutiny because ageing effects are highly variable between individuals, are task dependent, and are sometimes not distinguished from general age-related slowing. We recently developed the minimally delayed oculomotor response (MDOR) task in which participants are presented with a simple visual target step, and instructed to saccade not to the target when it appears (a prosaccade response), but when it disappears (i.e. on target offset). Varying the target display duration (TDD) prevents offset timing being predictable from the time of target onset, and saccades prior to the offset are counted as errors. A comparison of MDOR task performance in a group of 22 older adults (mean age 62 years, range 50–72 years) with that in a group of 39 younger adults (22 years, range 19–27 years) demonstrated that MDOR latency was significantly increased in the older group by 34–68 ms depending on TDD. However, when MDOR latencies were corrected by subtracting the latency observed in a standard prosaccade task, the latency difference between groups was abolished. There was a larger latency modulation with TDD in the older group which was observed even when their generally longer latencies were taken into account. Error rates were significantly increased in the older group. An analysis of the timing distribution of errors demonstrated that most errors were failures to inhibit responses to target onsets. When error distributions were used to isolate clear inhibition failures from other types of error, the older group still exhibited significantly higher error rates as well as a higher residual error rate. Although MDOR latency in older participants may largely reflect a general slowing in the oculomotor system with age, both the latency modulation and error rate results are consistent with an age-related inhibitory control deficit. How this relates to performance on other inhibitory control tasks remains to be investigated.
topic Saccade
Inhibition
Ageing
Latency
url https://peerj.com/articles/8401.pdf
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