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RESEARCH ARTICLE |
1 Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
2 Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Address correspondence to Alan D. Castel, Department of Psychology, 100 St. George Street, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3G3. E-mail: alan{at}psych.utoronto.ca
Inhibition of return (IOR) occurs when people are slower to detect a target that appeared at a previously cued location. Prior research has shown that younger and older adults display similar amounts of IOR, but this research has not examined the time course of the process. Because elderly people may be slower to engage or disengage spatially based attention, the present experiment examined age differences in IOR at stimulus-onset asynchronies ranging from 50 ms to 3,000 ms. The results show that the peak magnitude of IOR was similar for younger and older adults, but the onset of IOR occurred approximately 300 ms later in elderly persons. Older adults also showed a greater degree of facilitation at shorter stimulus-onset asynchronies. The results suggest that there is a change in the temporal dynamics of inhibition that occurs with age.
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