Article

Intra- and inter-task reliability of spatial attention measures in healthy older adults

Details

Citation

Märker G, Learmonth G, Thut G & Harvey M (2019) Intra- and inter-task reliability of spatial attention measures in healthy older adults. PLoS ONE, 14 (12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226424

Abstract
At present, there is a lack of systematic investigation into intra- and inter-task consistency effects in older adults, when investigating lateralised spatial attention. In young adults, spatial attention typically manifests itself in a processing advantage for the left side of space (“pseudoneglect”), whereas older adults have been reported to display no strongly lateralised bias, or a preference towards the right side. Building on our earlier study in young adults, we investigated older adults, aged between 60 to 86 years, on five commonly used spatial attention tasks (line bisection, landmark, grey and grating scales and lateralised visual detection). Results confirmed a stable test-retest reliability for each of the five spatial tasks across two testing days. However, contrary to our expectations of a consistent lack in bias or a rightward bias, two tasks elicited significant left spatial biases in our sample of older participants, in accordance with pseudoneglect (namely the line bisection and greyscales tasks), while the other three tasks (landmark, grating scales, and lateralised visual detection tasks) showed no significant biases to either side of space. This lack of inter-task correlations replicates recent findings in young adults. Comparing the two age groups revealed that only the landmark task was age sensitive, with a leftward bias in young adults and an eliminated bias in older adults. In view of these findings of no significant inter-task correlations, as well as the inconsistent directions of the observed spatial biases for the older adults across the five tested tasks, we argue that pseudoneglect is a multi-component phenomenon and highly task sensitive. Each task may engage slightly distinct neural mechanisms, likely to be impacted differently by age. This complicates generalisation and comparability of pseudoneglect effects across different tasks, age-groups and hence studies.

Journal
PLoS ONE: Volume 14, Issue 12

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of Glasgow
Publication date31/12/2019
Publication date online31/12/2019
Date accepted by journal26/11/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35508
eISSNElectronic: 1932-6203

People (1)

People

Dr Gemma Learmonth

Dr Gemma Learmonth

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology