| Literature DB >> 31162403 |
Judith Dirk1, Gesa Katharina Kratzsch2, John P Prindle3, Ulf Kröhne4, Frank Goldhammer5,6, Florian Schmiedek7.
Abstract
The effects of aging on response time were examined in a paper-based lexical-decision experiment with younger (age 18-36) and older (age 64-75) adults, applying Ratcliff's diffusion model. Using digital pens allowed the paper-based assessment of response times for single items. Age differences previously reported by Ratcliff and colleagues in computer-based experiments were partly replicated: older adults responded more conservatively than younger adults and showed a slowing of their nondecision components of RT by 53 ms. The rates of evidence accumulation (drift rate) showed no age-related differences. Participants with a higher score in a vocabulary test also had higher drift rates. The experiment demonstrates the possibility to use formal processing models with paper-based tests.Entities:
Keywords: aging; diffusion model; paper-based assessment; processing speed
Year: 2017 PMID: 31162403 PMCID: PMC6526453 DOI: 10.3390/jintelligence5020012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intell ISSN: 2079-3200
Figure 1Illustration of the central parameters of the diffusion model for a lexical decision task. Note: a = boundary separation, z = starting point s = variation in starting point, v = drift rate. Note that the nondecision time t0 is not illustrated since it also involves processes of response preparation.
Subject characteristics.
| Measure | Younger Adults | Older Adults | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 25.70 | 4.78 | 18.00 | 36.00 | 68.10 | 3.14 | 64.00 | 75.00 |
| Years of education | 13.00 | 1.92 | 10.00 | 17.00 | 14.90 | 3.58 | 8.00 | 20.00 |
| Vocabulary | 72.06 | 12.23 | 46.42 | 96.32 | 85.37 | 13.41 | 57.33 | 105.74 |
| Processing speed | 66.05 | 11.01 | 49.00 | 82.00 | 50.10 | 9.43 | 35.00 | 68.00 |
Figure A1Illustration of one page of the lexical decision task.
Figure 2The dot pattern behind this magnified printed rectangle and letter “o” (a) is used by the infrared camera built in Anoto Digital Pens (b) to uniquely identify its location.
Summary of reaction times (RT) and accuracy data.
| Group and Condition | Accuracy | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Younger adults | ||||
| Words | 0.91 (0.07) | 709 (184) | 1030 (359) | 985 (16) |
| Nonwords | 0.98 (0.02) | 737 (188) | 994 (457) | 989 (11) |
| 2. Older adults | ||||
| Words | 0.98 (0.02) | 723 (138) | 1227 (314) | 938 (119) |
| Nonwords | 0.96 (0.07) | 805 (149) | 1024 (234) | 954 (99) |
Summary of diffusion model parameters.
| Group and Condition | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Younger adults (words) | 1.472 (0.675) | 2.106 (0.489) | 0.345 (0.073) | 0.724 (0.089) | 0.662 (0.191) | 0.183 (0.052) | 0.256 (0.088) |
| Younger adults (nonwords) | −1.944 (0.645) | 0.359 (0.123) | |||||
| Older adults (words) | 2.033 (0.602) | 2.679 (0.540) | 0.399 (0.071) | 0.771 (0.107) | 0.758 (0.153) | 0.172 (0.062) | 0.215 (0.062) |
| Older adults (nonwords) | −2.069 (0.545) | 0.305 (0.125) |
Note: Mean values of the parameter estimates are presented. Values in parentheses refer to the standard deviations of the mean parameter estimates.
Figure A2Comparison of the empirical and the predicted cumulative density function (CDF) for words (left) and nonwords (right). Note that the red line represents the predicted CDF and the crossed line represents the observed CDF.
Figure 3Relationship between drift rate and vocabulary by age group. Note: open circles = younger adults; filled circles = older adults.