Age-related influences on repetition priming in the verb generation task: examining the role of response competition

Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn. 2010;17(4):439-61. doi: 10.1080/13825580903469846. Epub 2010 Feb 19.

Abstract

The identification-production framework suggests that aging is associated with a decline in production forms of repetition priming, particularly under test conditions that maximize response competition. The present study examined this prediction by testing young and healthy older adults in a single-encoding version of the verb generation task in which some items had one dominant verb response (low competition) or had no such dominant response (high competition). Further analyses examined whether priming and error rates were related to performance on neuropsychological tests purported to measure frontal lobe functioning. Priming was invariant across age groups and was not related to frontal lobe status in older adults, but frontal lobe status did predict task performance: low-frontal older adults made more errors than high-frontal older adults, particularly for high-competition items and items with high association strength. These results are not consistent with the identification-production framework, but are consistent with the conclusions that (a) aging is associated with invariance in the processes that support repetition priming in the verb generation task and (b) frontal lobe status in aging is related to verb generation performance.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Aging / psychology*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Language*
  • Linguistics
  • Male
  • Mental Processes*
  • Middle Aged
  • Neuropsychological Tests
  • Psycholinguistics
  • Reaction Time
  • Speech*
  • Young Adult