Age-related differences in acquisition of perceptual-motor skills: working memory as a mediator |
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Authors: | Kennedy Kristen M Partridge Ty Raz Naftali |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48202, USA. |
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Abstract: | Aging is associated with reduced performance on information processing speed, memory, and executive functions tasks. Although older adults are also less apt in acquiring new perceptual-motor skills, it is unclear whether and how skill acquisition difficulties are associated with age-related general cognitive differences. We addressed this question by examining structural relations among measures of cognitive resources (working memory) and indices of perceptual-motor skill acquisition (pursuit rotor and mirror tracing) in 96 healthy adults aged 19-80 years of age. Three competing structural models were tested: a single (common) factor model, a dual correlated factors model, and a hierarchical dual-factor model. The third model provided the best fit to the data, indicating age differences in simple perceptual-motor skill are partially mediated by more complex abilities. |
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