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Aging and temporal discrimination of brief auditory intervals
Authors:Thomas H. Rammsayer  Susan D. Lima  Wolfgang H. Vogel
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology, University of Giessen, Otto-Behaghel-Strasse 10F, W-6300 Giessen, Germany;(2) Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, PO Box 413, W153201 Milwaukee, USA;(3) Department of Pharmacology, Thomas Jefferson University, Thomas Jefferson University, 1020 Locust St., 19107 Philadelphia, PA, USA
Abstract:Summary In a duration-discrimination experiment, young adults (mean age = 25.1), middle-aged adults (mean age = 45.5), and older adults (mean age = 64.6) were presented with two very brief auditorily marked intervals per trial, and their task was to decide which of the two was longer in duration. An adaptive psychophysical procedure was used to determine difference thresholds in relation to a constant standard interval of 50 ms. It was found that duration-discrimination performance was unaffected by age; all three age groups yielded a difference threshold of approximately 17 ms. It was concluded that the ability to discriminate durations of very brief auditory intervals appears to be based on an underlying timing mechanism that does not slow down with advancing adult age.
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