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2006 | 15 | 85-104

Article title

OVERCOMING SEMANTIC INTERFERENCE - AGE EFFECT

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
Semantic interference is found when two classes of potential verbal reactions represent the same semantic category and become competitive as to the aim and/or context of an utterance. The most common, classic interference phenomenon of this type is the so-called 'Stroop effect' which has been widely applied in the study of aging and cognitive control. This paper first presents various developmental aspects of the phenomenon of semantic interference and then recalls some empirical studies, as well as two main theoretical explanations according to changes in Stroop performance with advanced age: the general slowdown hypothesis, and the cognitive inhibition hypothesis. The authoress' own studies on age differences in the performance of the Polish version of the Stroop interference test are presented and their results discussed. Different age-related performance patterns for the younger, middle-aged, and older participants on the two parts of an interference naming subtask were found, which extends the existing findings. The more inhibition demanded by alternate naming and reading subtasks appeared not to cause a qualitatively different kind of processing though lengthening with age. The findings support rather a general slowdown than an inhibitory breakdown explanation

Contributors

author
  • H. Okuniewska, Uniwersytet Warszawski, Wydzial Psychologii, ul. Stawki 5/7, 00-183 Warszawa, Poland

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

CEJSH db identifier
07PLAAAA02374952

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.f485e3f8-1e1e-3df8-bcaf-a13ad2781a21
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