Involuntary capture and voluntary reorienting of attention decline in middle-aged and old participants
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Frontiers Media
Abstract
The main aim of this study was to examine the effects of aging on event-related brain
potentials (ERPs) associated with the automatic detection of unattended infrequent
deviant and novel auditory stimuli (Mismatch Negativity, MMN) and with the orienting to
these stimuli (P3a component), as well as the effects on ERPs associated with reorienting
to relevant visual stimuli (Reorienting Negativity, RON). Participants were divided into three
age groups: (1) Young: 21–29 years old; (2) Middle-aged: 51–64 years old; and (3) Old:
65–84 years old. They performed an auditory-visual distraction-attention task in which
they were asked to attend to visual stimuli (Go, NoGo) and to ignore auditory stimuli (S:
standard, D: deviant, N: novel). Reaction times (RTs) to Go visual stimuli were longer
in old and middle-aged than in young participants. In addition, in all three age groups,
longer RTs were found when Go visual stimuli were preceded by novel relative to deviant
and standard auditory stimuli, indicating a distraction effect provoked by novel stimuli.
ERP components were identified in the Novel minus Standard (N-S) and Deviant minus
Standard (D-S) difference waveforms. In the N-S condition, MMN latency was significantly
longer in middle-aged and old participants than in young participants, indicating a
slowing of automatic detection of changes. The following results were observed in both
difference waveforms: (1) the P3a component comprised two consecutive phases in all
three age groups—an early-P3a (e-P3a) that may reflect the orienting response toward
the irrelevant stimulation and a late-P3a (l-P3a) that may be a correlate of subsequent
evaluation of the infrequent unexpected novel or deviant stimuli; (2) the e-P3a, l-P3a, and
RON latencies were significantly longer in the Middle-aged and Old groups than in the
Young group, indicating delay in the orienting response to and the subsequent evaluation
of unattended auditory stimuli, and in the reorienting of attention to relevant (Go) visual
stimuli, respectively; and (3) a significantly smaller e-P3a amplitude in Middle-aged and
Old groups, indicating a deficit in the orienting response to irrelevant novel and deviant
auditory stimuli
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Bibliographic citation
Correa-Jaraba KS, Cid-Fernández S, Lindín M and Díaz F (2016) Involuntary Capture and Voluntary Reorienting of Attention Decline in Middle-Aged and Old Participants. Front. Hum. Neurosci. 10:129. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2016.00129
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https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2016.00129Sponsors
This work was financially supported by funds
from the Spanish Government: Ministerio de Economía y
Competitividad (PSI2014-55316-C3-3-R); and from the Galician
Government: Consellería de Cultura, Educación e Ordenación
Universitaria; axudas para a consolidación e Estruturación de
unidades de investigación competitivas do Sistema universitario
de Galicia (GPC2014/047), with FEDER funds
Rights
Copyright © 2016 Correa-Jaraba, Cid-Fernández, Lindín and Díaz. This is an openaccess article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms








