Journal of Behavioral and Brain Science

Volume 10, Issue 10 (October 2020)

ISSN Print: 2160-5866   ISSN Online: 2160-5874

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Task Co-Representation in Aging: An Event-Related Potential Study

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DOI: 10.4236/jbbs.2020.1010029    299 Downloads   1,003 Views  

ABSTRACT

The goal of the present study was to investigate age-related changes in attentional allocation for shared task representations during joint performance; event-related potentials were recorded while participants performed a modified visual three-stimulus oddball task, both alone and together with another participant. Younger adults and older adults (14 each) participated in the study. Participants were required to identify rare target stimuli while ignoring frequent standards, as well as rare non-targets assigned to a partner’s action (i.e., no-go stimuli for one’s own task). ERP component, nogo-P3 and P3b were measured to investigate the inhibition and the attentional allocation to the partner’s stimuli. Results showed that younger adults elicited larger frontal nogo P3 and parietal P3b for non-targets in the joint than in the individual condition. Contrary to expectation, older adults induced frontal no-go P3 in the joint condition not in the individual condition. In the sharing of the task with another, the result suggested that the efficiency of matching of incoming information with the representation of the other’s task declined with age, whereas aging did not affect the suppression of incorrect preparation of motor responses instigated by this representation.

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Kato, K. and Yoshizaki, K. (2020) Task Co-Representation in Aging: An Event-Related Potential Study. Journal of Behavioral and Brain Science, 10, 455-469. doi: 10.4236/jbbs.2020.1010029.

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