Age-Related Differences in Decision-Making: Evidence Accumulation is More Gradual in Older Age

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Abstract

Older adults tend to exhibit longer response times than younger adults in choice tasks across cognitive domains, such as perception, attention, and memory. The diffusion model has emerged as a standard model for analyzing age differences in choice behavior. Applications of the diffusion model to choice data from younger and older adults indicate that age-related slowing is driven by a more cautious response style and slower non-decisional processes, rather than by age differences in the rate of information accumulation. The Lévy flight model, a new evidence accumulation model that extends the diffusion model, was recently developed to account for differences in response times for correct and error responses. In the Lévy flight model, larger jumps in evidence accumulation can be accommodated compared to the diffusion model. It is currently unknown whether younger and older adults differ with respect to the jumpiness of evidence accumulation. In the current study, younger and older adults (N = 40 per age group) completed a letter-number-discrimination task. Results indicate that older adults show a more gradual (less “jumpy”) pattern of evidence accumulation compared to younger adults. Implications for research on cognitive aging are discussed.

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Wieschen, E. M., Makani, A., Radev, S. T., Voss, A., & Spaniol, J. (2023). Age-Related Differences in Decision-Making: Evidence Accumulation is More Gradual in Older Age. Experimental Aging Research. https://doi.org/10.1080/0361073X.2023.2241333

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