| Literature DB >> 21336566 |
Shikha Snigdha1, Lori-Ann Christie, Christina De Rivera, Joseph A Araujo, Norton W Milgram, Carl W Cotman.
Abstract
Aging has been shown to disrupt performance on tasks that require intact visual search and discrimination abilities in human studies. The goal of the present study was to determine if canines show age-related decline in their ability to perform a novel simultaneous visual search task. Three groups of canines were included: a young group (N = 10; 3 to 4.5 years), an old group (N = 10; 8 to 9.5 years), and a senior group (N = 8; 11 to 15.3 years). Subjects were first tested for their ability to learn a simple two-choice discrimination task, followed by the visual search task. Attentional demands in the task were manipulated by varying the number of distracter items; dogs received an equal number of trials with either zero, one, two, or three distracters. Performance on the two-choice discrimination task varied with age, with senior canines making significantly more errors than the young. Performance accuracy on the visual search task also varied with age; senior animals were significantly impaired compared to both the young and old, and old canines were intermediate in performance between young and senior. Accuracy decreased significantly with added distracters in all age groups. These results suggest that aging impairs the ability of canines to discriminate between task-relevant and -irrelevant stimuli. This is likely to be derived from impairments in cognitive domains such as visual memory and learning and selective attention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21336566 PMCID: PMC3260365 DOI: 10.1007/s11357-011-9219-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Age (Dordr) ISSN: 0161-9152
Fig. 1Two-choice discrimination learning is impaired in senior dogs. Mean errors to acquire the task are shown for each age group. Senior dogs made significantly more errors than young dogs and tended to make more errors compared to old dogs, while the old and young groups did not differ. Data are shown as mean ± SEM *p < 0.05, significant increase in errors compared with young
Fig. 2Performance accuracy shown as ratio correct (a) and response latency shown in seconds (b) across all age groups in phase II using the same stimuli used for the two-choice discrimination task. Senior dogs show significantly decreased accuracy, but not latency, compared to young dogs. Latency increases with increasing number of distracters across all groups. Data are shown as mean ± SEM. ***p < 0.001, significant decrease in ratio of correct response compared with young
Fig. 3Performance accuracy shown as ratio correct (a) and response latency shown in seconds (b) across all age groups in phase III using stimuli different from those used for the two-choice discrimination task. Senior dogs show significantly decreased accuracy, but not latency, compared to young dogs. Latency increases with increasing number of distracters across all groups. Data are shown as mean ± SEM. ***p < 0.001, significant decrease in ratio of correct response compared with young