Effects of Prior-Task Success on Young and Older Adults’ Cognitive Performance an Evaluation of the Strategy Hypothesis

In prior-task success, older adults improve cognitive performance on target tasks after successfully accomplishing a prior task. We tested the hypothesis that effects of prior-task success occur via older adults’ selecting the better strategy more often and executing strategies more efficiently on e...

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Main Authors: Patrick Lemaire, Fleur Brun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2018-02-01
Series:Journal of Cognition
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journalofcognition.org/articles/17
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spelling doaj-c96b0c0688c640c4acb5e8e89a271df22020-11-24T20:59:45ZengUbiquity PressJournal of Cognition2514-48202018-02-011110.5334/joc.1716Effects of Prior-Task Success on Young and Older Adults’ Cognitive Performance an Evaluation of the Strategy HypothesisPatrick Lemaire0Fleur Brun1Aix-Marseille Université, LPC and CNRS MarseilleAix-Marseille Université, LPC and CNRS MarseilleIn prior-task success, older adults improve cognitive performance on target tasks after successfully accomplishing a prior task. We tested the hypothesis that effects of prior-task success occur via older adults’ selecting the better strategy more often and executing strategies more efficiently on each problem under a prior-task success condition. Young and older participants accomplished computational estimation tasks (i.e., providing the best estimates to arithmetic problems) under a success or a control condition. They successfully accomplished a Stroop task or accomplished no prior task before taking the target arithmetic task. Participants had to select the better strategy on each problem in Experiment 1 and to execute a cue strategy in Experiment 2. Consistent with the strategy hypothesis, older adults, but not young adults, (a) obtained better performance, (b) used the better strategy more often, (c) inappropriately repeated the same strategy less often across successive problems, and (d) executed strategies more efficiently, under a prior-task success condition relative to a control condition. These results highlight the role of strategic variations in effects of prior-task success. They have important implications when assessing age differences in human cognition during both normal and pathological aging.https://www.journalofcognition.org/articles/17effects of prior-task successstrategiesstrategy selectionstrategy execution arithmetic problem solving
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Lemaire
Fleur Brun
spellingShingle Patrick Lemaire
Fleur Brun
Effects of Prior-Task Success on Young and Older Adults’ Cognitive Performance an Evaluation of the Strategy Hypothesis
Journal of Cognition
effects of prior-task success
strategies
strategy selection
strategy execution arithmetic problem solving
author_facet Patrick Lemaire
Fleur Brun
author_sort Patrick Lemaire
title Effects of Prior-Task Success on Young and Older Adults’ Cognitive Performance an Evaluation of the Strategy Hypothesis
title_short Effects of Prior-Task Success on Young and Older Adults’ Cognitive Performance an Evaluation of the Strategy Hypothesis
title_full Effects of Prior-Task Success on Young and Older Adults’ Cognitive Performance an Evaluation of the Strategy Hypothesis
title_fullStr Effects of Prior-Task Success on Young and Older Adults’ Cognitive Performance an Evaluation of the Strategy Hypothesis
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Prior-Task Success on Young and Older Adults’ Cognitive Performance an Evaluation of the Strategy Hypothesis
title_sort effects of prior-task success on young and older adults’ cognitive performance an evaluation of the strategy hypothesis
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Journal of Cognition
issn 2514-4820
publishDate 2018-02-01
description In prior-task success, older adults improve cognitive performance on target tasks after successfully accomplishing a prior task. We tested the hypothesis that effects of prior-task success occur via older adults’ selecting the better strategy more often and executing strategies more efficiently on each problem under a prior-task success condition. Young and older participants accomplished computational estimation tasks (i.e., providing the best estimates to arithmetic problems) under a success or a control condition. They successfully accomplished a Stroop task or accomplished no prior task before taking the target arithmetic task. Participants had to select the better strategy on each problem in Experiment 1 and to execute a cue strategy in Experiment 2. Consistent with the strategy hypothesis, older adults, but not young adults, (a) obtained better performance, (b) used the better strategy more often, (c) inappropriately repeated the same strategy less often across successive problems, and (d) executed strategies more efficiently, under a prior-task success condition relative to a control condition. These results highlight the role of strategic variations in effects of prior-task success. They have important implications when assessing age differences in human cognition during both normal and pathological aging.
topic effects of prior-task success
strategies
strategy selection
strategy execution arithmetic problem solving
url https://www.journalofcognition.org/articles/17
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