Abstract

Ten younger and ten older adults were provided with 16 sessions of conjunction search under consistent mapping, where target and distractors remain constant in identity. The target and one distractor were reversed after every fourth session. After the first four training sessions, on target-present trials, display size slopes were near zero for both age groups. However, on target-absent trials, older adults continued to show significantly larger display size effects than younger adults. There were no systematic age differences in either the probability of fixating objects that possess the target's features or in the amount of disruption at any reversal. Thus, although older adults exhibited more conservative criteria in visual search, they developed proficient and flexible search skill to the same degree as their younger counterparts. These data have implications for models of visual attention, skill acquisition, and cognitive aging.

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