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Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, Vol 52, Issue 2 P103-P107, Copyright © 1997 by The Gerontological Society of America
ARTICLES |
J Pratt, RA Abrams and AL Chasteen
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto. pratt@psych.utoronto.ca
Previous research with young adults has shown that the latency to initiate a saccadic eye movement is typically reduced when the visual fixation stimulus is removed prior to the appearance of a peripheral target stimulus (the "gap effect"). The present study sought to determine whether such fixation offsets would produce similar reductions in reaction time in both younger and older adults. The results indicated that older adults have longer overall latencies to initiate saccadic eye movements and that they exhibit the gap effect. However, the reduction in reaction time due to the fixation offset was approximately equal between younger and older adults relative to the overall saccadic latencies. These findings, along with some other recent evidence, suggest that some of the mechanisms involved in the production of saccadic eye movements may not reveal the changes often found in the skeletal motor system with increasing age. The implications of the findings to age-related differences in inhibitory function are discussed.
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