Age, sex, and hemisphere asymmetry differences induced by a concurrent memory processing task
- 1 June 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Experimental Aging Research
- Vol. 5 (3) , 217-237
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03610737908257200
Abstract
Subjects in three age groups matched simultaneously presented pairs of visual words or geometric shape stimuli as belonging in a “same” or “different” category. No age effects were observed unless subjects were also required to repeat the sequence of the last three “same-different” responses immediately following each trial. Cerebral asymmetry effects were expected for the word and shape dimensions, but were not observed. Asymmetry effects for the same-different dimensions were noted and allowed inference regarding serial and parallel processing effects. When required to repeat the sequence of past responses following each trial, older males showed an increase in time to make the same judgments. Older females showed increased right vs left visual field processing times when required to repeat the sequence of same-different responses following each trial.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Age and sex differences in cerebral asymmetry as a function of competition for “time” and “space” in a successive auditory matching taskExperimental Aging Research, 1977
- Sex Differences in Cognition: A Function of Maturation Rate?Science, 1976
- Hemisphere-hand interactions for the matching of lettersExperimental Aging Research, 1975
- Age and Sex Differences in the Processing of Verbal and Nonverbal StimuliJournal of Gerontology, 1974
- Coding strategies and cerebral laterality effectsCognitive Psychology, 1973
- Visual and verbal coding in the interhemispheric transfer of informationActa Psychologica, 1973
- The Asymmetry of the Human BrainScientific American, 1973
- Reactions toward the apparent source of an auditory stimulus.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1971