The relevance of situation awareness in older adults' cognitive functioning: A review

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Abstract

Age-related declines in cognition may have detrimental effects on older adults' ability to complete everyday activities that young- and middle-aged individuals perform automatically. Theories of cognitive aging have found deficits in older adults' fluid intelligence, capacity for inhibition, number of processing resources, and speed of processing, and in recent years, studies have proposed cognitive strategies to ameliorate these declines. However, few strategies directly train the cognitive strategies necessary to improve performance in dynamic environments and physical activities. One such strategy may be the enhancement of situation awareness, the capability to perceive and understand one's environment. Although the term has typically been applied to pilots and other expert performers, situation awareness may also be relevant to cognitive aging, where older adults' perception and comprehension of their environment become critical to everyday functioning and physical activities. If older adults' situation awareness can be facilitated, then it may be possible to reduce the impact of age-related cognitive declines, allowing older adults to successfully participate in dynamic situations and sports where the environment is constantly changing (e.g., driving and tennis). The following review outlines cognitive deficits in aging, details their relation to situation awareness, and discusses how training in situation awareness may reduce cognitive declines. © European Group for Research into Elderly and Physical Activity (EGREPA) 2007.

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APA

Caserta, R. J., & Abrams, L. (2007, April). The relevance of situation awareness in older adults’ cognitive functioning: A review. European Review of Aging and Physical Activity. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11556-007-0018-x

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