Title of article
Age differences in spatial memory in a virtual environment navigation task
Author/Authors
Scott D. Moffat، نويسنده , , Alan B. Zonderman، نويسنده , , Susan M. Resnick، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
10
From page
787
To page
796
Abstract
The use of virtual environment (VE) technology to assess spatial navigation in humans has become increasingly common and provides an opportunity to quantify age-related deficits in human spatial navigation and promote a comparative approach to the neuroscience of cognitive aging. The purpose of the present study was to assess age differences in navigational behavior in a VE and to examine the relationship between this navigational measure and other more traditional measures of cognitive aging. Following pre-training, participants were confronted with a VE spatial learning task and completed a battery of cognitive tests. The VE consisted of a richly textured series of interconnected hallways, some leading to dead ends and others leading to a designated goal location in the environment. Compared to younger participants, older volunteers took longer to solve each trial, traversed a longer distance, and made significantly more spatial memory errors. After 5 learning trials, 86% of young and 24% of elderly volunteers were able to locate the goal without error. Performance on the VE navigation task was positively correlated with measures of mental rotation and verbal and visual memory.
Keywords
Route learning , maze , Virtual Reality , Navigation , age , Spatial memory , Hippocampus , human
Journal title
Neurobiology of Aging
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Neurobiology of Aging
Record number
820090
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