1994
DOI: 10.1037/0882-7974.9.4.491
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Aging and inhibition: Beyond a unitary view of inhibitory processing in attention.

Abstract: The authors examined the question of whether a decrease in the efficiency of inhibitory processing with aging is a general phenomenon. Thirty elderly and 32 young adults performed a series of tasks from which the authors could extract measures of inhibitory function. The tasks and task components included response compatibility, negative priming, stopping, spatial precuing, Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST), and the Cognitive Failures Questionnaire (CFQ). Only limited evidence for age-related differences in i… Show more

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Cited by 621 publications
(551 citation statements)
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References 138 publications
(270 reference statements)
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“…Anguera and Gazzaley (2012) identified a later latency peak onset for unsuccessful inhibition 36 trials in both N2 and P3. Only the P3 latency correlated with the SSRT, which is similar to other studies of age-related effects that used the Stop-signal task (Kramer et al 1994). These results suggest the latency of the P3 might be an index of age-related inhibition changes.…”
Section: Age-related Inhibition Changes Between 200 and 400 Mssupporting
confidence: 86%
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“…Anguera and Gazzaley (2012) identified a later latency peak onset for unsuccessful inhibition 36 trials in both N2 and P3. Only the P3 latency correlated with the SSRT, which is similar to other studies of age-related effects that used the Stop-signal task (Kramer et al 1994). These results suggest the latency of the P3 might be an index of age-related inhibition changes.…”
Section: Age-related Inhibition Changes Between 200 and 400 Mssupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Although these results point to a general slowing that affects inhibition processes, Vallesi (2011) In the Stop-Signal paradigm, a greater SSRT has been identified for older adults, which suggests an age-related deficit in inhibition that is not explained by a general decline in processing speed (Kramer et al 1994;Andres et al 2008). In an ERP experiment, Anguera and Gazzaley (2012) studied age-related modulations of the N2 and P3 associated with inhibition in a visual Stop-signal task and determined that the older adults' greater SSRT was associated with the P3 latency but not with the P3 amplitude or the N2 latency or amplitude.…”
Section: Age-related Inhibition Changes Between 200 and 400 Msmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…With regard to semantic processes, difficulties inhibiting the reading and processing of irrelevant information embedded in a text [26,36,44], suppressing no longer relevant information produced following a reading task [49] or restraining the production of a word that is strongly induced by the context of a sentence [6] have frequently been reported. Motor inhibition deficits were also observed on the stop-signal task [66,74], the go/no-go task [80] and the antisaccade task [18]. Finally, decreased directed forgetting abilities in working and episodic memory have also been reported [9,106].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Finally, decreased directed forgetting abilities in working and episodic memory have also been reported [9,106]. However, a negative effect of aging on suppression abilities has not been systematically observed (see [63] for the Stroop task, [27,66,67,96,102] for negative priming and [48] for inhibition of return), or is sometimes explained by more basic cognitive variables, such as a decrease in processing speed [88,89,101], fluid intelligence abilities [93] or circadian preferences [59; see 105].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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