Examining age-related differences in auditory attention control using a task-switching procedure

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Abstract

Objectives.Using a novel task-switching variant of dichotic selective listening, we examined age-related differences in the ability to intentionally switch auditory attention between 2 speakers defined by their sex.Method.In our task, young (Mage = 23.2 years) and older adults (Mage = 66.6 years) performed a numerical size categorization on spoken number words. The task-relevant speaker was indicated by a cue prior to auditory stimulus onset. The cuing interval was either short or long and varied randomly trial by trial.Results.We found clear performance costs with instructed attention switches. These auditory attention switch costs decreased with prolonged cue-stimulus interval. Older adults were generally much slower (but not more error prone) than young adults, but switching-related effects did not differ across age groups.Discussion.These data suggest that the ability to intentionally switch auditory attention in a selective listening task is not compromised in healthy aging. We discuss the role of modality-specific factors in age-related differences. © 2012 © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. All rights reserved.

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Lawo, V., & Koch, I. (2014). Examining age-related differences in auditory attention control using a task-switching procedure. Journals of Gerontology - Series B Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, 69(2), 237–244. https://doi.org/10.1093/geronb/gbs107

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