Neuroscience

Articles and news from the latest research reports.

95 notes

Declining intelligence in old age linked to visual processing

Researchers have uncovered one of the basic processes that may help to explain why some people’s thinking skills decline in old age. Age-related declines in intelligence are strongly related to declines on a very simple task of visual perception speed, the researchers report in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on August 4.

The evidence comes from experiments in which researchers showed 600 healthy older people very brief flashes of one of two shapes on a screen and measured the time it took each of them to reliably tell one from the other. Participants repeated the test at ages 70, 73, and 76. The longitudinal study is among the first to test the hypothesis that the changes they observed in the measure known as “inspection time” might be related to changes in intelligence in old age.

"The results suggest that the brain’s ability to make correct decisions based on brief visual impressions limits the efficiency of more complex mental functions," says Stuart Ritchie of the University of Edinburgh. "As this basic ability declines with age, so too does intelligence. The typical person who has better-preserved complex thinking skills in older age tends to be someone who can accumulate information quickly from a fleeting glance."

Previous studies had shown that smarter people, as measured by standard IQ tests, tend to be better at discerning the difference between two briefly presented shapes, the researchers explain. But before now no one had looked to see how those two measures might change over time as people grow older. The findings were rather unexpected.

"What surprised us was the strength of the relation between the declines," Ritchie says. "Because inspection time and the intelligence tests are so very different from one another, we wouldn’t have expected their declines to be so strongly connected."

The results provide evidence that the slowing of simple, visual decision-making processes might be part of what underlies declines in the complex decision making that we recognize as general intelligence. The results might also find practical use given the simplicity of the inspection time measure, Ritchie says, noting that the test can be taken very simply on a computer and has been used with children, adults, and even patients with dementia or other medical disorders.

"Since the declines are so strongly related, it might be easier under some circumstances to use inspection time to chart a participant’s cognitive decline than it would be to sit them down and give them a full, complicated battery of IQ tests," he says.

(Source: eurekalert.org)

Filed under visual perception intelligence thinking aging cognition psychology neuroscience science

  1. microbiomusings reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  2. andreasnusantara reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  3. practicaleccentricity reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  4. powerofblog reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  5. astudyinpsychology reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  6. machinegang reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  7. schizo321437 reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  8. blueskyscrapers reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  9. holy-shit-8 reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  10. man-is-the-measure reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  11. fulgore-vox reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  12. aproductofbliss reblogged this from neurosciencestuff and added:
    Researchers have uncovered one of the basic processes that may help to explain why some people’s thinking skills decline...
  13. noyourusernameisinvalid reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  14. cocogonzalez26 reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  15. thequietimmersion reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  16. stephisaunicorn reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  17. thesleepingramen reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  18. this-is-halloween-town reblogged this from doodleholic
  19. knarsisus reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  20. doodleholic reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  21. ilikethewayyoumove reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
free counters