An Electrophysiological Study of Aging and Perceptual Letter-Matching

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Abstract.

Background: Previous studies on perceptual letter-matching have found that younger and older adults showed “fast-same” effects for response time and “false-different” effects for errors but the effects were more pronounced for older adults. According to the Noisy Operator Theory, internal noise in visual processing distorts “same” trials into appearing different whereas distortion for “different” trials does not affect performance. Older adults have a “noisier” representation of items within perceptual processing which can impact perceptual matching. However, EEG measures may provide a more direct measure of letter-matching decisions.

Methods: We measured the P300 event-related potential (ERP) amplitude, an index of familiarity in stimulus categorization, and behavioral measures (response time and accuracy) to assess letter-matching performance.

Results: Individuals responded faster to “same” trials than to “different” trials but were less accurate. Older adults showed similar P300 amplitudes across trial type whereas younger adults produced a larger amplitude for “same” than “different” trials, suggesting that older adults showed less familiarity for “same” trials than did younger adults – a prediction of the Noisy Operator Theory.

Conclusions: These ERP results are consistent with the Noisy Operator Theory –suggesting that an age-related increase in internal noise affected letter-matching performance.

Contributors.

Peter R. Mallik, Philip A. Alen, Mei-Ching Lien, Elliott Jardin, Michelle L. Hughes, James R. Houston, & Brianna K. Jurosic

Publication.

Experimental Aging Research