Abstract

A visual search task was used to investigate how visual attention and intraindividual variability changes with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Specifically, we examined the contribution of shifting efficacy, distribution of attention, and controlled processing to declines in visual attention in two groups with MCI (single-domain amnestic and multi-domain amnestic), and measured changes in intraindividual variability. Our results demonstrate that visual search performance is attenuated in multi-domain amnestic MCI, but not single-domain amnestic MCI. In addition, we found that the multi-domain amnestic MCI group was more variable than the older controls and single-domain amnestic MCI participants. These between-group differences in search efficacy and intraindividual variability increased as a function of task complexity. We attribute these decrements in performance to changes in the control of attention and shifting efficacy, but not the distribution of attention.

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