“…Although exogenous attention has been shown to be relatively stable across development (Iarocci, Enns, Randolph, & Burack, 2009;Langley et al, 2011;Waszak, Li, & Hommel, 2010), endogenous attention to task-relevant stimuli has been shown to change according to a U-shaped pattern across the lifespan, with gradual improvement from childhood to adulthood, followed by a decline into old age (Enns, Brodeur, & Trick, 1998;Plude, Enns, & Brodeur, 1994;Rueda et al, 2004;Waszak et al, 2010). These developmental changes are thought to reflect a corresponding improvement and subsequent decline in the ability to endogenously inhibit taskirrelevant information from childhood to adulthood (e.g., Cavallina, Puccio, Capurso, Bremner, & Santangelo, 2018;Dempster, 1992;Harnishfeger, 1995) to old age (e.g., Dempster, 1992;Hasher & Zacks, 1988;Poliakoff, Ashworth, Lowe, & Spence, 2006;Tipper, 1991). However, exogenous attentional capture under concurrent endogenous attention controlor, adopting more ecological terminology, the resistance to distraction when we are voluntarily engaged in an attentionallydemanding taskhas rarely been assessed across the lifespan.…”