The relationship of P3 latency of the event-related potential (ERP) to psychometric performance was investigated in 41 subjects who ranged in age from 20 to 88 years. P3 responses were recorded from subjects using an auditory oddball paradigm with and without task-demands. Subjects also received psychometric tests of verbal performance, visuospatial performance, concentration, and immediate, recent and remote memory. Factor analysis was used to reduce the set of psychometric measures to four factors (Verbal learning, general intelligence, narrative recall/fluency, and concentration). Both passive and active P3 latency showed a linear increase with age. Age was inversely correlated with verbal learning performance. After accounting for the i...
International audienceThis experiment investigated age differences in electrophysiological correlate...
The relationship of visual P3a and P3b to age and neuropsychological performance was investigated in...
As people age, their performance on tasks requiring cognitive control often declines. Such a decline...
An auditory "oddball" paradigm was used to elicit the P300 component of the event-related brain pote...
While some elderly show deteriorations in cognitive performance, others achieve performance levels c...
The ability to selectively attend to task-relevant information increases throughout childhood and de...
The ability to selectively attend to task-relevant information increases throughout childhood and de...
In oddball tasks, the P3 component of the event-related potential systematically varies with the tim...
The mental speed approach to individual differences in mental ability (MA) is based on the assumptio...
Event-related P300 potentials closely reflect cognitive functions such as stimulus discrimination (N...
THESIS 9071Combining neuropsychological and electrophysiological methodologies this thesis investiga...
The ability to selectively attend to task-relevant information increases throughout childhood and de...
International audienceOlder adults recruit relatively more frontal as compared to parietal resources...
Older adults recruit relatively more frontal as compared to parietal resources in a variety of cogni...
Most cognitive neuroscientific research exploring the nature of age-associated compensatory mechanis...
International audienceThis experiment investigated age differences in electrophysiological correlate...
The relationship of visual P3a and P3b to age and neuropsychological performance was investigated in...
As people age, their performance on tasks requiring cognitive control often declines. Such a decline...
An auditory "oddball" paradigm was used to elicit the P300 component of the event-related brain pote...
While some elderly show deteriorations in cognitive performance, others achieve performance levels c...
The ability to selectively attend to task-relevant information increases throughout childhood and de...
The ability to selectively attend to task-relevant information increases throughout childhood and de...
In oddball tasks, the P3 component of the event-related potential systematically varies with the tim...
The mental speed approach to individual differences in mental ability (MA) is based on the assumptio...
Event-related P300 potentials closely reflect cognitive functions such as stimulus discrimination (N...
THESIS 9071Combining neuropsychological and electrophysiological methodologies this thesis investiga...
The ability to selectively attend to task-relevant information increases throughout childhood and de...
International audienceOlder adults recruit relatively more frontal as compared to parietal resources...
Older adults recruit relatively more frontal as compared to parietal resources in a variety of cogni...
Most cognitive neuroscientific research exploring the nature of age-associated compensatory mechanis...
International audienceThis experiment investigated age differences in electrophysiological correlate...
The relationship of visual P3a and P3b to age and neuropsychological performance was investigated in...
As people age, their performance on tasks requiring cognitive control often declines. Such a decline...