| Literature DB >> 33772477 |
Antonino Vallesi1,2, Virginia Tronelli3, Francesco Lomi4, Rachele Pezzetta5.
Abstract
Many aspects of attention decline with aging. There is a current debate on how aging also affects sustained attention. In this study, we contribute to this debate by meta-analytically comparing performance on the go/no-go Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) in younger and older adults. We included only studies in which the SART had a low proportion of no-go trials (5%-30%), there was a random or quasirandom stimulus presentation, and data on both healthy younger and older adults were available. A total of 12 studies were suitable with 832 younger adults and 690 older adults. Results showed that older adults were slower than younger adults on go trials (g = 1, 95% CI [.72, 1.27]) and more accurate than younger adults on no-go trials (g = .59, 95% CI [.32, .85]). Moreover, older adults were slower after a no-go error than younger adults (g = .79, 95% CI [.60, .99]). These results are compatible with an age-related processing speed deficit, mostly suggested by longer go RTs, but also with an increased preference for a prudent strategy, as demonstrated by fewer no-go errors and greater posterror slowing in older adults. An inhibitory deficit account could not explain these findings, as older adults actually outperformed younger adults by producing fewer false alarms to no-go stimuli. These findings point to a more prudent strategy when using attentional resources in aging that allows reducing the false-alarm rate in tasks producing a tendency for automatic responding.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive aging; Go/no-go; Motor inhibition; SART; Sustained attention; Vigilance
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33772477 PMCID: PMC8642381 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-021-01908-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychon Bull Rev ISSN: 1069-9384
Fig. 2Left: Summary results of the meta-analysis regarding RT differences between younger and older adults, including Hedges’ g, confidence interval (CI), and relative weight of each study. The weight was computed as the inverse of the within-study variance with an additive estimate of the between-studies variance (T2) based on the DerSimonian-Laird method (Van Rhee et al., 2015), since a random effects model was used. Right: Forest plot showing the effect size (in blue) of each study with its confidence interval (in black) and the combined effect size (in green) with its confidence interval (in black) and its prediction interval (in green). The larger the blue dot, the higher the study weight. The positive effect size shows longer RTs in older adults than in younger adults. (Color figure online)
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of the retrieved articles, evaluated according to the inclusion/exclusion criteria and included in the analysis
Newcastle–Ottawa Scale (adapted for cross-sectional studies)
| Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Selection (maximum 3 points) | Representativeness of the sample: a) Truly representative of the average in the target population (all subjects or random sampling) (1 point) b) Somewhat representative of the average in the target population (nonrandom sampling) (1 point) c) Selected group of users d) No description of the sampling strategy | Nonrespondents: a) Comparability between respondents and nonrespondents characteristics is established, and the response rate is satisfactory (1 point) b) The response rate is unsatisfactory, or the comparability between respondents and nonrespondents is unsatisfactory c) No description of the response rate or the characteristics of the responders and the nonresponders | Ascertainment of the exposure (risk factor): a) Validated measurement tool (1 point) b) Nonvalidated measurement tool, but the tool is available or described c) No description of the measurement tool |
| Comparability (maximum 2 points) | The subjects in different outcome groups are comparable, based on the study design or analysis. Confounding factors are controlled: a) The study controls for the most important factor (select one) (1 point) b) The study control for any additional factor (1 point) | ||
| Outcome (maximum 2 points) | Assessment of the outcome: a) Independent blind assessment (1 point) b) Record linkage (1 point) c) Self report d) No description | Statistical test: a) The statistical test used to analyze the data is clearly described and appropriate, and the measurement of the association is presented, including confidence intervals and the probability level ( b) The statistical test is not appropriate, not described or incomplete |
Summary of the studies included in the meta-analysis
| SART task | Number of go trials | Number of no-go trials | Total number of trials | Duration of the task (min.) | Variables considered | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brache et al., | Modified version | 950 (95%) | 50 (5%) | 1,000 | 50 | RT, Accuracy no-go trials |
| Carriere et al., | Robertson et al., | 200 (89%) | 25 (11%) | 225 | 4 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials |
| Jackson & Balota, | Robertson et al., | 192 (89%) | 24 (11%) | 216 | ≈4 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials, Posterror slowing |
| Jackson & Balota, | Robertson et al., | 244 (89%) | 31 (11%) | 275 | ≈5 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials, Posterror slowing |
| Jackson & Balota, | Robertson et al., | 200 (89%) | 25 (11%) | 225 | ≈10 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials, Posterror slowing |
| McAvinue et al., | Robertson et al., | 200 (89%) | 25 (11%) | 225 | 5.4 | Accuracy go/no-go trials |
| Jackson et al., | Robertson et al., | 299 (89%) | 37 (11%) | 336 | ≈14 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials |
| Jackson et al., | Robertson et al., | 299 (89%) | 37 (11%) | 336 | ≈14 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials |
| Jackson et al., | Robertson et al., | 299 (89%) | 37 (11%) | 336 | ≈14 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials |
| Jackson et al., | Robertson et al., | 299 (89%) | 37 (11%) | 336 | ≈14 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials |
| McVay et al., | Modified version | 800 (89%) | 100 (11%) | 900 | ≈20 | RT, Accuracy no-go trials, Posterror slowing |
| Kousaie et al., | Robertson et al., | 200 (89%) | 25 (11%) | 225 | NA | RT, Accuracy no-go trials |
| Kousaie et al., | Robertson et al., | 200 (89%) | 25 (11%) | 225 | NA | RT, Accuracy no-go trials |
| Kousaie et al., | Robertson et al., | 200 (89%) | 25 (11%) | 225 | NA | RT, Accuracy no-go trials |
| Staub et al., | Robertson et al., | 720 (89%) | 90 (11%) | 810 | 30 | RT, Accuracy no-go trials |
| Staub et al., | Robertson et al., | 720 (89%) | 90 (11%) | 810 | 30 | RT, Accuracy no-go trials |
| Hsieh et al., | Modified version | 140 (70%) | 60 (30%) | 200 | 23 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials |
| Cassarino et al., | Robertson et al., | 152 (89%) | 19 (11%) | 171 | 6.48 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials |
| Mioni et al., | Robertson et al., | 200 (89%) | 25 (11%) | 225 | 4.31 | RT, Accuracy go/no-go trials, Posterror slowing |
Note. This Table displays 19 rows, although the included articles were only 12, because the study by Jackson and Balota (2012) is divided into three independent substudies, the study by Jackson et al. (2013) into four, and that by Kousaie et al. (2014) into three.
Summary of demographic characteristics of the included samples
| Women/ | Age Younger | Education Younger | Women/Men | Age Older | Education Older | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brache et al., | 18 | 14/4 | 21 ± 1.41 (18–33) | 15 | 17 | 13/4 | 64.29 | 13.68 |
| Carriere et al., | 199 | NA | 24.43 ± 2.29 (20–29) | NA | 43 | NA | 64.91 ± 4.53 (60–77) | NA |
| Jackson & Balota, | 54 | 29/25 | 19 ± .9 NA | 13 ± .9 | 62 | 40/22 | 77.3 ± 6.9 NA | 15 ± 2.5 (O. > Y., |
| Jackson & Balota, | 29 | 18/11 | 19.4 ± .8 NA | 13.4 ± 1.1 | 38 | 31/7 | 75.8 ± 6.5 NA | 14.7 ± 2.8 (O. > Y., |
| Jackson & Balota, | 31 | 16/15 | 20.9 ± 1.4 NA | 14.9 ± 1.5 | 49 | 29/20 | 76.3 ± 6.4 NA | 15.8 ± 2.6 |
| McAvinue et al., | 28 | 18/10 | 28.25 ± 2.85 (20–37) | 17.52 ± 1.09 | 27 | 16/11 | 67.78 ± 2.37 (60–75) | 15.2 ± .60 |
| Jackson et al., | 44 | NA | 25.1 ± 3.8 (18–30) | NA | 27 | NA | 57.5 ± 5.3 (50–70) | NA |
| Jackson et al., | 45 | NA | 24.1 ± 3.1 (18–30) | NA | 30 | NA | 57 ± 6.4 (50–70) | NA |
| Jackson et al., | 42 | 19/23 | 25.3 ± 3.1 (18–30) | 15.1 ± 1.9 | 44 | 27/17 | 56.8 ± 5.6 (50–73) | 15.8 ± 2.9 |
| Jackson et al., | 40 | 22/18 | 25 ± 3.2 (18–30) | 15.7 ± 1.9 | 30 | 21/9 | 56.2 ± 4.7 (50–73) | 14.9 ± 2.4 |
| McVay et al., | 55 | NA | 19.04 ± 1.79 (18–28) | 12.85 ±1.32 | 49 | NA | 66.76 ± 4.35 (60–75) | 15.22 ± 2.76 |
| Kousaie et al., | 40 | 25/15 | 21.48 ± 1.5 NA | 15.55 ± 1.13 | 31 | 15/16 | 72.26 ± 6.43 NA | 15.26 ± 2.87 |
| Kousaie et al., | 30 | 20/10 | 21.8 ± 2.47 NA | 15.13 ± 1.38 | 30 | 23/7 | 72.6 ± 6.59 NA | 16.2 ± 2.57 |
| Kousaie et al., | 51 | 33/18 | 21.49 ± 2.26 NA | 15.49 ± 1.47 | 36 | 17/19 | 70.69 ± 5.86 NA | 16.14 ± 2.85 |
| Staub et al., | 30 | 21/9 | 24.8 ± NA (18–32) | 15.2 ± 2.38 | 30 | 16/14 | 65.2 ± NA (60–74) | 14.3 ± 2.44 |
| Staub et al., | 27 | 18/9 | 24.4 ± NA (18–29) | 15.4 ± 2.4 | 25 | 14/11 | 65.5 ± NA (62–71) | 14.5 ± 2.3 |
| Hsieh et al., | 18 | 0/18 | 23.9 ± 2.3 (21–30) | 16.3 ± 1.7 | 17 | 0/17 | 66.4 ± 1.2 (65–69) | 16.2 ± 1.5 |
| Cassarino et al., | 21 | 12/9 | 21.48 ± 7.09 NA | NA | 75 | 42/33 | 68.6 ± 8.65 (60–95) | NA |
| Mioni et al., | 30 | 23/7 | 22.6 ± 4.23 (18–39) | 14.17 ± 1.74 | 30 | 26/4 | 74.33 ± 5.54 (63–85) | 14.37 ± 3.35 |
Quality assessment using the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale (adapted for cross-sectional studies)
| Selection | Comparability | Outcome | Total | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Quality rating | Q1 | Quality rating | Q1 | Q2 | Quality rating | ||
| Brache et al., | b | c | a | Fair (=2) | ab | Good (=2) | a | a | Good (=2) | 6 |
| Carriere et al., | b | a | a | Good (=3) | a | Fair (=1) | a | a | Good (=2) | 6 |
| Jackson et al., 2012* | b | a | a | Good (=3) | a | Fair (=1) | a | a | Good (=2) | 6 |
| McAvinue et al., | b | c | a | Fair (=2) | ab | Good (=2) | a | a | Good (=2) | 6 |
| Jackson et al., | b | a | a | Good (=3) | ab | Good (=2) | a | a | Good (=2) | 7 |
| McVay et al., | b | c | a | Fair (=2) | ab | Good (=2) | a | a | Good (=2) | 6 |
| Kousaie et al., | b | c | a | Fair (=2) | ab | Good (=2) | a | a | Good (=2) | 6 |
| Staub et al., | d | c | a | Poor (=1) | ab | Good (=2) | a | a | Good (=2) | 5 |
| Staub et al., | d | c | a | Poor (=1) | ab | Good (=2) | a | a | Good (=2) | 5 |
| Hsieh et al., | b | c | a | Fair (=2) | ab | Good (=2) | a | a | Good (=2) | 6 |
| Cassarino et al., | b | a | a | Good (=3) | ab | Good (=2) | a | a | Good (=2) | 7 |
| Mioni et al., | b | c | a | Fair (=2) | ab | Good (=2) | a | a | Good (=2) | 6 |
*The substudies composing these articles were considered together, as they obtained the same NOS score.
Fig. 3Left: Summary meta-analytical results regarding PES differences between younger and older adults, including Hedges’ g, confidence interval (CI), and relative weight of each study. Weight computation is explained in Fig. 2. Right: Forest plot showing the effect size (in blue) of each study with its confidence interval (in black) and the combined effect size (in green) with its confidence interval (in black) and its prediction interval (in green). The larger the blue dot, the higher the study weight. The positive effect size shows longer RTs after a commission error for older adults than for younger adults. (Color figure online)
Fig. 4Left: Summary results of meta-analysis regarding accuracy on no-go trial differences between younger and older adults, including Hedges’ g, confidence interval (CI), and relative weight of each study. Weight computation as in Fig. 2. Right: Forest plot showing the effect size (in blue) of each study with its confidence interval (in black) and the combined effect size (in green) with its confidence interval (in black) and its prediction interval (in green). The larger the blue dot, the higher the study weight. The positive effect size shows higher performance in older adults than in younger adults. (Color figure online)
Fig. 5Funnel plot of the studies in the RTs analysis, represented by blue dots, with effect size (x-axis) and standard error (y-axis). There is also the combined effect size (green dot) with its confidence interval (black) and prediction interval (green), and the adjusted effect size (red dot) for imputed data points with the corresponding intervals (black and red, respectively). The adjusted effect size is lower than the original one because it takes into account three missing studies located on the left of the mean effect. (Color figure online)
Fig. 6Funnel plot of the studies in the PES analysis, represented by blue dots, with effect size (x-axis) and standard error (y-axis). The plot also reports the combined effect size (green dot) and the adjusted effect size (red dot) with their confidence intervals (black) and prediction intervals (green and red, respectively). The original combined effect size is equal to the adjusted one since the “trim and fill” method found no missing studies. (Color figure online)
Fig. 7Funnel plot of the studies in the no-go accuracy analysis, represented by blue dots, with effect size (x-axis) and standard error (y-axis). The combined effect size (green dot) and its adjusted estimate (red dot) are also depicted, with their confidence intervals (black) and prediction intervals (green and red, respectively). The two combined effects are equal since the “trim and fill” algorithm found no evidence of publication bias. (Color figure online)