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Assessment of Age-related Changes in Cognitive Functions Using EmoCogMeter, a Novel Tablet-computer Based Approach
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Individual differences, aging, and IQ in two-choice tasks.

Roger Ratcliff1, Anjali Thapar, Gail McKoon

  • 1Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210, United States. ratcliff.22@osu.edu

Cognitive Psychology
|December 8, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Aging and IQ impact cognitive performance, with IQ significantly affecting decision evidence quality, not age. Performance declines with age were similar across IQ levels.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Psychometrics

Background:

  • Cognitive aging research explores how age affects mental processes.
  • Intelligence (IQ) is a key factor in cognitive abilities.
  • Understanding the interplay between aging, IQ, and cognitive tasks is crucial.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the effects of aging and IQ on performance in cognitive tasks.
  • To analyze how different components of cognitive processing are influenced by age and IQ.
  • To examine the validity of the diffusion model in explaining age and IQ effects on performance.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized three two-choice tasks: numerosity discrimination, recognition memory, and lexical decision.
  • Applied Ratcliff's (1978) diffusion model to analyze accuracy, response times, and distributions.
  • Compared processing components across different age groups (young adults, 60-74, 75-90) and IQ levels (83-146).

Main Results:

  • The diffusion model accurately explained performance data across tasks, age, and IQ.
  • Age-related performance declines were consistent across low and high IQ groups.
  • IQ, not age, significantly impacted the quality of evidence used for decision-making.

Conclusions:

  • Cognitive processing components correlate across tasks for individuals.
  • Age and IQ effects are more pronounced on slower responses, supporting the 'worst performance rule'.
  • Findings highlight IQ's role in decision evidence quality, independent of age-related performance decline patterns.