Age Differences in Resolving Power and Decision Strategies in a Weight Discrimination Task

Abstract
Current theories of aging suggest that at least part of the decline in performance on psychophysical tasks, commonly observed in older subjects, may be the result of their becoming more cautious about sensory decisions. This conclusion has been supported by experiments in which the criterion index, β, from signal detection theory is shown to be higher (indicating a strict criterion) for older subjects. A weight-discrimination experiment is reported which failed to replicate the earlier results; older subjects' criteria were the same or more lax than those of younger controls on that task. The possibility that extreme caution on the part of older people may be specific to certain classes of task is discussed.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: