Abstract

Previous studies have drawn different conclusions about whether older adults benefit more from audiovisual integration, and such conflicts may have been due to the stimulus features investigated in those studies, such as stimulus intensity. In the current study, using ERPs, we compared the effects of stimulus intensity on audiovisual integration between young adults and older adults. The results showed that inverse effectiveness, which depicts a phenomenon that lowing the effectiveness of sensory stimuli increases benefits of multisensory integration, was observed in young adults at earlier processing stages but was absent in older adults. Moreover, at the earlier processing stages (60–90 ms and 110–140 ms), older adults exhibited significantly greater audiovisual integration than young adults (all ps < 0.05). However, at the later processing stages (220–250 ms and 340–370 ms), young adults exhibited significantly greater audiovisual integration than old adults (all ps < 0.001). The results suggested that there is an age-related dissociation between early integration and late integration, which indicates that there are different audiovisual processing mechanisms in play between older adults and young adults.

Full Text
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