Rapid speech processing and divided attention : processing rate versus processing resources as an explanation of age effects.

Author(s)
Tun, P.A. Wingfield, A. Stine, E.A.L. & Mecsas, C.
Year
Abstract

A dual-task study was conducted to examine age differences in speech processing under varying loads. Younger and older adults listened to and immediately recalled spoken passages presented at various speech rates (140-280 words per min.). This task was performed alone as well as in a divided-attention condition in which subjects concurrently performed a picture recognition task. Consistent with the slowing hypothesis, older adults' immediate memory performance was differentially depressed when speech rates were very fast. The Age x Speech Rate interaction, however, was not exacerbated in the divided-attention condition. This suggests that aging may reduce the rate at which the processing operations underlying memory for speech are completed, but this is conceptually distinct from an age-related reduction in attentional capacity.

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Publication

Library number
952516 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Psychology and Aging, Vol. 7 (1992), No. 4, p. 546-550, 23 ref.

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