Back to Search Start Over

Preserved emotional modulation of motor response time despite psychomotor slowing in young-old adults

Authors :
Andrei Voustianiouk
Jean-Michel Gracies
Horacio Kaufmann
Stephanie Assuras
Joan C. Borod
C. Warren Olanow
Nancy S. Foldi
Judy Creighton
Winona Tse
Thomas D. Hälbig
Source :
The International journal of neuroscience. 121(8)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Whereas aging affects cognitive and psychomotor processes negatively, the impact of aging on emotional processing is less clear. Using an “old–new” binary decision task, we ascertained the modulation of response latencies after presentation of neutral and emotional pictures in “young” (M = 27.1 years) and “young-old” adults with a mean age below 60 (M = 57.7 years). Stimuli varied on valence (pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant) and arousal (high and low) dimensions. Young-old adults had significantly longer reaction times. However, young and young-old adults showed the exact same pattern of response time modulation by emotional stimuli: Response latencies were longer for high-arousal than for low-arousal pictures and longer for negative than for positive or neutral stimuli. This result suggests that the specific effects of implicitly processed emotional valence and arousal information on behavioral response time are preserved in young-old adults despite significant age-related psychomotor decline.

Details

ISSN :
15635279
Volume :
121
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The International journal of neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c19f8ffa72a222ab728de3b4c249b52e