| Literature DB >> 25152731 |
Claire V Hutchinson1, Tim Ledgeway2, Harriet A Allen2.
Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that normal aging is typically accompanied by impairment in the ability to perceive the global (overall) motion of visual objects in the world. The purpose of this study was to examine the interplay between age-related changes in the ability to perceive translational global motion (up vs. down) and important factors such as the spatial extent (size) over which movement occurs and how cluttered the moving elements are (density). We used random dot kinematograms (RDKs) and measured motion coherence thresholds (% signal elements required to reliably discriminate global direction) for young and older adults. We did so as a function of the number and density of local signal elements, and the aperture area in which they were displayed. We found that older adults' performance was relatively unaffected by changes in aperture size, the number and density of local elements in the display. In young adults, performance was also insensitive to element number and density but was modulated markedly by display size, such that motion coherence thresholds decreased as aperture area increased (participants required fewer local elements to move coherently to determine the overall image direction). With the smallest apertures tested, young participants' motion coherence thresholds were considerably higher (~1.5 times worse) than those of their older counterparts. Therefore, when RDK size is relatively small, older participants were actually better than young participants at processing global motion. These findings suggest that the normal (disease-free) aging process does not lead to a general decline in perceptual ability and in some cases may be visually advantageous. The results have important implications for the understanding of the consequences of aging on visual function and a number of potential explanations are explored. These include age-related changes in spatial summation, reduced cortical inhibition, neural blur and attentional resource allocation.Entities:
Keywords: age; aperture size; dot density; global motion; vision
Year: 2014 PMID: 25152731 PMCID: PMC4126366 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2014.00199
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1Examples of stimulus composition. (A) Experiment 1: Dot number remained constant irrespective of aperture size such that dot density decreased as aperture size increased. (B) Experiment 2: Dot number increased with increasing aperture size such that dot density remained constant. (C) Experiment 3: Dot number varied and aperture size remained constant such that increasing dot number led to an increase in dot density.
Figure 2Experiment 1: Mean global motion coherence thresholds (% signal dots supporting 79% correct direction discrimination performance) for “young” and “old” participants as a function of aperture area. Dot number remained constant (64 dots) such that a two-fold increase in aperture area (in the range 28–227 deg2) corresponded to a two-fold decrease in dot density (in the range 2.26–0.28 dots/deg2). Error bars = ±1 S.E.M.
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| 2.00 | 20 | 0.059 | |
| 2.69 | 20 | 0.014 | |
| 1.35 | 20 | 0.191 | |
| −1.16 | 20 | 0.261 |
Figure 3Experiment 2: Mean global motion coherence thresholds for “young” and “old” participants as a function of aperture area. Dot density remained constant (1.13 dots/deg2) across conditions such that a two-fold increase in aperture area (in the range 14–227 deg2) corresponded to an equivalent increase in dot number (in the range 16–256 dots). Error bars = ±1 S.E.M.
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| 2.11 | 22 | 0.051 | |
| 2.27 | 22 | 0.034 | |
| 2.11 | 22 | 0.046 | |
| 0.62 | 22 | 0.540 | |
| −1.11 | 22 | 0.279 |
Figure 4Experiment 3: Mean global motion coherence thresholds for “young” and “old” participants at two dot densities (0.44 and 1.13 dots/deg Error bars = ±1 S.E.M.