Title of article
Asymmetry in stimulus and response conflict processing across the adult lifespan: ERP and EMG evidence
Author/Authors
Killikelly، نويسنده , , Clare and Sz?cs، نويسنده , , Dénes، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
16
From page
2888
To page
2903
Abstract
Several studies have shown that conflict processing improves from childhood to adulthood and declines from adulthood to old age. However the neural mechanisms underlying this lifespan asymmetry were previously unexplored. We combined event-related potentials (ERPs) and electromyography (EMG) to examine lifespan changes in stimulus and response conflict processing using a modified Stroop task. We used a Stroop task that a priori dissociated stimulus and response conflict. Delayed P3b latency and increased amplitude revealed that middle age adults have a deficit in stimulus processing. Additionally a sustained P3a across frontal and central electrodes occurred only in middle age adults indicating the recruitment of frontal activity. Conversely, decreased lateralized readiness potential (LRP) amplitude and increased EMG activity in the incorrect hand in adolescents reveal protracted development of response processing into late adolescence. The N450, a measure of conflict processing, was found to be sensitive to both stimulus and response conflict. Altogether these results provide evidence for asymmetrical differences in stimulus and response conflict processing across adolescence, young adulthood and middle age.
Keywords
middle age , Adolescence , Colour word Stroop task , N450 , P3A , Lateralized readiness potential , ageing
Journal title
Cortex
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Cortex
Record number
2301497
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