Eye movements of young and older adults while reading with distraction. |
| |
Authors: | Kemper Susan; McDowd Joan; Kramer Art |
| |
Affiliation: | Kemper, Susan; McDowd, Joan; Kramer, Art (Ed) |
| |
Abstract: | The authors used eye-tracking technology to examine young and older adults' online performance in the reading in distraction paradigm. Participants read target sentences and answered comprehension questions following each sentence. In some sentences, single-word distracters were presented in either italic or red font. Distracters could be related or unrelated to the target text. Online measures, including probability of fixation, fixation duration, and number of fixations to distracting text, revealed no age differences in text processing. However, young adults did have an advantage over older adults in overall reading time and text comprehension. These results provide no support for an inhibition deficit account of age differences in the reading in distraction paradigm, but are consistent with J. Dywan and W. E. Murphy's (1996) suggestion that older adults are less able than the young to distinguish target and distracter information held in working memory. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
| |
Keywords: | inhibition reading with distraction eye movements distraction inhibitory deficit theory online reading performance age differences text comprehension |
|
|