Title:
Age-related differences in selective attention to emotional material: does task-relevance matter?

dc.contributor.advisor Verhaeghen, Paul
dc.contributor.author Pehlivanoglu, Didem
dc.contributor.committeeMember Duarte, Audrey
dc.contributor.committeeMember Hertzog, Christopher
dc.contributor.committeeMember Wheeler, Mark
dc.contributor.committeeMember Isaacowitz, Derek
dc.contributor.department Psychology
dc.date.accessioned 2019-01-16T17:21:48Z
dc.date.available 2019-01-16T17:21:48Z
dc.date.created 2018-12
dc.date.issued 2018-08-24
dc.date.submitted December 2018
dc.date.updated 2019-01-16T17:21:48Z
dc.description.abstract According to the inhibitory deficit hypothesis, older adults have difficulties in preventing task-irrelevant materials from gaining access to working memory (Lustig, Hasher, & Zacks, 2007). Some neuroscientific evidence, however, show that the age-related inhibitory deficit disappears when task difficulty is equated. Thus, it is still not clear whether findings regarding the age-related inhibitory deficit are confounded by task-related factors or not. Additionally, although previous studies showed that event-related potentials (ERPs) to emotional material change as a function of task relevancy in the young, it is still an open question whether there are age-related differences on this issue. Combining these questions, the goal of this dissertation was to examine the effect of age on ERP correlates of inhibitory functioning by employing a selective attention task which required younger and older adults to selectively attend to either pictures (emotional or non-emotional) or to flanking line bars, concurrently presented on the screen. In the picture task, participants decided whether the picture was presented in black and white or color; in the bar task, they indicated whether the orientation of the bars matched or not. Prior to the experiment, I individually calibrated the difficulty of the non-emotional bar task such that accuracy was 75% correct. The behavioral data showed no interference from emotional material in the bar task. Accuracy in the picture task was higher for emotional relative to neutral pictures in the picture task, regardless of age. ERPs provided evidence for both emotion-based and more differentiated valence-based effect for the younger adult group in the picture task. In the bar task, there was evidence for enlarged ERPs for task-irrelevant emotional relative to task-irrelevant neutral pictures during the time windows (250-300 ms and 350-450 ms) associated with the negative ERP components, but task-irrelevant emotional material was suppressed at a later stage of processing (500-700 ms). ERP results for the older adult group provided evidence for an emotional positivity effect and an emotional negativity effect in the picture task. In the bar task, although interference from positive images occurred at early stage of processing, ERPs to task-irrelevant emotional and neutral pictures were similar during later ERP components. These findings are discussed in light of theories of cognitive aging and different accounts of emotional processing in aging.
dc.description.degree Ph.D.
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1853/60734
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
dc.subject Inhibitory deficit
dc.subject Perceptual load
dc.subject Aging
dc.subject Cognitive control
dc.subject Positivity bias
dc.subject Negativity bias
dc.subject ERP
dc.title Age-related differences in selective attention to emotional material: does task-relevance matter?
dc.type Text
dc.type.genre Dissertation
dspace.entity.type Publication
local.contributor.advisor Verhaeghen, Paul
local.contributor.corporatename College of Sciences
local.contributor.corporatename School of Psychology
relation.isAdvisorOfPublication d0bc257f-d93b-4371-8bb5-b74ce481912e
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication 85042be6-2d68-4e07-b384-e1f908fae48a
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication 768a3cd1-8d73-4d47-b418-0fc859ce897d
thesis.degree.level Doctoral
Files
Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Thumbnail Image
Name:
PEHLIVANOGLU-DISSERTATION-2018.pdf
Size:
2.29 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:
License bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
LICENSE.txt
Size:
3.87 KB
Format:
Plain Text
Description: