Abstract

With the help of the current experiment, we wanted to learn more about the impact of visually demanding vs. cognitively demanding secondary tasks on the attention allocation of older pedestrians during the phase of traffic perception within the process of road crossing. For this purpose, we used two different road crossing tasks as well as two different secondary tasks. The road crossing “stop task” was a signal detection task, where an approaching car had to be detected. The road crossing “go task” was a dynamic visual search task, where the resolution of a busy road situation had to be identified. The visual secondary task was a static visual search task and the cognitive secondary task was a 1-back (memory) task. One younger group (≤ 30 years) and one older group (≥ 65 years) of participants completed the tasks as single vs. dual-tasks in all possible combinations. Performance was measured through errors and response time; in addition, the subjective workload was assessed via NASA-TLX. Analyses show that the visual secondary task reduces performance in the road crossing more strongly than the cognitive task, while the visual task itself is less impaired by the road crossing tasks than is the cognitive task. Overall, performance diminishes from single to dual-task completion. Results further indicate age effects in terms of increased errors and response time for older compared to younger participants. In addition to these age effects, age-specific dual-task effects emerge for response time in the go task along with the visual task as well as for response time in the cognitive task along with the go task. Subjective workload is higher in the dual-task conditions than in the single tasks. Findings are discussed with regard to theoretical and practical implications.

Highlights

  • Walking supports both physical and psychological health (Cirkel and Juchelka, 2007)

  • For comparison of road crossing task baselines to control for effects of learning and fatigue, three-way mixed ANOVAs were conducted with road crossing task and block as within-subjects factors and age group as between-subjects factor

  • With the help of the current experiment, we wanted to learn more about the impact of visual secondary task demands on the attention allocation of older pedestrians during the phase of traffic detection within the process of road crossing

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Summary

Introduction

Walking supports both physical and psychological health (Cirkel and Juchelka, 2007). it is a key factor for self-determent living and social participation (Limbourg and Matern, 2009; Hefter and Götz, 2013). Age-related declines of sensory, cognitive, and motoric functions are the underlying reasons for many of these accidents (cf Oxley et al, 2004). It is not the decline of abilities per se that causes the crashes. It is rather an interplay of certain elements of the complex task of road crossing with specific impairments of older people. A few studies exist regarding phase one “selection of crossing location” (i.e., Holland and Hill, 2007; Bernhoft and Carstensen, 2008) and phase two “traffic perception” (i.e., Snowden and Kavanagh, 2006; Tapiro et al, 2016; Stafford et al, 2019). See the systematic review of Wilmut and Purcell (2021)

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