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Journal Article

Citation

McDowd JM, Craik FIM. J. Exp. Psychol. Hum. Percept. Perform. 1988; 14(2): 267-280.

Affiliation

Erindale College, University of Toronto, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1988, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2967880

Abstract

We report two experiments that compare the performance of young and older adults on perceptual-motor tasks involving division of attention. Previous studies have shown older people to be especially penalized by divided attention situations, but the generality of this finding was recently challenged by Somberg and Salthouse (1982). The present study was conducted to investigate the possibility that age differences in dual-task performance are amplified by an increase in the difficulty of the constituent tasks, where difficulty was manipulated by varying the central, cognitive nature of the tasks (Experiment 1) or the degree of choice involved (Experiment 2). With the present tasks, strong evidence was found for an age-related decrement in divided attention performance. Contrary to our original expectations, however, it does not seem that division of attention presents some especial difficulty to older people. Rather, division of attention is one of several equivalent ways to increase overall task complexity. In turn, age differences are exaggerated as tasks are made more complex.


Language: en

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