Emotional Response Inhibition Is Greater in Older Than Younger Adults.
TL;DR: The present study extends the literature of emotional response inhibition in younger adulthood into late life, and further elucidates how cognitive aging interacts with affective control processes, and provides new evidence that in the domain of response inhibition older adults may more effectively employ emotion regulatory ability, albeit on a slower time course.
read more
Abstract: Emotional information rapidly captures our attention and also often invokes automatic response tendencies, whereby positive information motivates approach, while negative information encourages avoidance. However, many circumstances require the need to override or inhibit these automatic responses. Control over responses to emotional information remains largely intact in late life, in spite of age-related declines in cognitive control and inhibition of responses to non-emotional information. The goal of this behavioral study was to understand how the aging process influences emotional response inhibition for positive and negative information in older adults. We examined emotional response inhibition in 36 healthy older adults (ages 60-89) and 44 younger adults (ages 18-22) using an emotional Go/No-Go task presenting happy (positive), fearful (negative), and neutral faces. In both younger and older adults, happy faces produced more approach-related behavior (i.e., fewer misses), while fearful faces produced more avoidance-related behavior, in keeping with theories of approach/avoidance-motivated responses. Calculation of speed/accuracy trade-offs between response times and false alarm rates revealed that younger and older adults both favored speed at the expense of accuracy, most robustly within blocks with fearful faces. However, there was no indication that the strength of the speed/accuracy trade-off differed between younger and older adults. The key finding was that although younger adults were faster to respond to all types of faces, older adults had greater emotional response inhibition (i.e., fewer false alarms). Moreover, younger adults were particularly prone to false alarms for happy faces. This is the first study to directly test effects of aging on emotional response inhibition. Complementing previous literature in the domains of attention and memory, these results provide new evidence that in the domain of response inhibition older adults may more effectively employ emotion regulatory ability, albeit on a slower time course, compared to younger adults. Older adults' enhanced adaptive emotion regulation strategies may facilitate resistance to emotional distraction. The present study extends the literature of emotional response inhibition in younger adulthood into late life, and in doing so further elucidates how cognitive aging interacts with affective control processes.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
•Journal Article
Aging and Emotional Memory: The Forgettable Nature of Negative Images for Older Adults
TL;DR: The authors examined age differences in recall and recognition memory for positive, negative, and neutral stimuli and found that older adults showed a similar decrease with age in the relative memory advantage for negative pictures, while younger, middle-aged, and older adults were shown images on a computer screen and were asked first to recall as many as they could and then to identify previously shown images from a set of old and new ones.
47
Aging is associated with a prefrontal lateral-medial shift during picture-induced negative affect.
Carien M. van Reekum,Stacey M. Schaefer,Regina C. Lapate,Catherine J. Norris,Patricia A. Tun,Margie E. Lachman,Carol A Ryff,Richard J. Davidson +7 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that this change from lateral to medial PFC engagement in response to picture-induced negative affect reflects decreased reliance on executive function-related processes, possibly associated with reduced grey matter in lateral PFC, with advancing age to maintain emotional functioning.
Inhibition of emotions in healthy aging: age-related differences in brain network connectivity.
Ina S. Almdahl,Ina S. Almdahl,Liva Jenny Martinussen,Liva Jenny Martinussen,Ingrid Agartz,Kenneth Hugdahl,Kenneth Hugdahl,Maria Stylianou Korsnes,Maria Stylianou Korsnes +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors performed a face-word emotional Stroop task while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging of the brain and found that older adults had greater between-network and less within-network connectivity compared to younger adults.
10
The Effect of Odour Valence and Odour Detection Threshold on the Withholding and Cancellation of Reach-to-Press Responses
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of task-irrelevant odours as a function of their valence and threshold on both action withholding and action cancellation of reach-to-press movements was assessed.
Aging and task design shape the relationship between response time variability and emotional response inhibition
Shalmali Mirajkar,Jill D. Waring +1 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated effects of aging on interindividual variability (IIV) of response times during executive functioning tasks and found that older adults had more consistent responses (lower IIV) than younger adults in the stop-signal task, but not the go/no-go task.
References
“Mini-mental state”: A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician
Marshal F. Folstein,Marshal F. Folstein,Susan E B Folstein,Susan E B Folstein,Paul R. McHugh,Paul R. McHugh +5 more
TL;DR: A simplified, scored form of the cognitive mental status examination, the “Mini-Mental State” (MMS) which includes eleven questions, requires only 5-10 min to administer, and is therefore practical to use serially and routinely.
86.6K
A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician
Marshal Folstein,Susan E B Folstein,F. Folstein,Paul R. McHugh +3 more
- 01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: The Mini-Mental State (MMS) as mentioned in this paper is a simplified version of the standard WAIS with eleven questions and requires only 5-10 min to administer, and is therefore practical to use serially and routinely.
70.8K
An inventory for measuring depression
TL;DR: The difficulties inherent in obtaining consistent and adequate diagnoses for the purposes of research and therapy have been pointed out and a wide variety of psychiatric rating scales have been developed.
Algebraic correction methods for computational assessment of clone overlaps in DNA fingerprint mapping.
TL;DR: A straightforward algebraic correction procedure is proposed, which takes the Sulston score as a provisional value and applies a power-law equation to obtain an improved result, which provides a vastly improved probabilistic description of hypothesized clone overlaps.
Trail Making Test Part A and Brain Perfusion Imaging in Mild Alzheimer's Disease
Aki Shindo,Seishi Terada,Shuhei Sato,Chikako Ikeda,Shigeto Nagao,Etsuko Oshima,Osamu Yokota,Yosuke Uchitomi +7 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that functional activity of the bilateral superior parietal lobules is closely related to performance time on the TMT-A, which might be a promising index of dysfunction of the superiorParietal area among mild AD patients.