Executive Attentional Resources in Timing: Effects of Inhibitory Control and Cognitive Aging

被引:21
作者
Brown, Scott W. [1 ]
Johnson, Tammy M. [1 ]
Sohl, Mary E. [1 ]
Dumas, Meghan K. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ So Maine, Dept Psychol, Portland, ME 04103 USA
关键词
time perception; attention; executive function; cognitive aging; AGE-RELATED DIFFERENCES; LATENT-VARIABLE ANALYSIS; TIME-SHARING PERFORMANCE; SACCADIC EYE-MOVEMENTS; WORKING-MEMORY TASKS; RESPONSE-INHIBITION; OLDER-ADULTS; GO/NO-GO; ANTISACCADE TASK; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES;
D O I
10.1037/xhp0000078
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
This research is based on an executive resource theory of timing, which postulates that time perception relies on specialized attentional resources that support executive cognitive functions. In 4 experiments, older and younger participants performed a timing task and an executive task emphasizing inhibitory control under both single-task and dual-task conditions. The timing task in each experiment was serial temporal production. The executive tasks, representing different types of inhibitory control, were the flanker task (Experiment 1), the number-letter task (Experiment 2), the go/no-go task (Experiment 3), and the antisaccade task (Experiment 4). The results showed (a) a pattern of bidirectional interference in each experiment, in that the concurrent inhibition tasks interfered with timing performance and concurrent timing interfered with inhibition performance, (b) the older participants demonstrated a stronger bidirectional interference effect relative to younger participants in 3 experiments, and (c) weaker versions of the inhibition tasks produced weaker interference effects. These findings support the idea that temporal processing relies on executive attentional resources.
引用
收藏
页码:1063 / 1083
页数:21
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