posted on 2019-10-07, 07:34authored byAlexandra N. Scurry, Dustin Dutcher, John S. Werner, Fang Jiang
<p>Reliable duration perception of external events is
necessary to coordinate perception with action, precisely discriminate speech,
and for other daily functions. Visual duration perception can be heavily
influenced by concurrent auditory signals; however, age-related effects on this
process have received minimal attention. In the present study, we examined the effect
of aging on duration perception by quantifying (1) duration discrimination
thresholds, (2) auditory temporal dominance, and (3) visual duration
expansion/compression percepts induced by an accompanying auditory stimulus of
longer/shorter duration. Duration discrimination thresholds were significantly
greater for visual than auditory tasks in both age groups, however there was no
effect of age. While the auditory modality retained dominance in duration
perception with age, older adults still performed worse than young adults when
comparing durations of two target stimuli (e.g., visual) in the presence of
distractors from the other modality (e.g., auditory). Finally, both age groups
perceived similar visual duration compression, whereas older adults exhibited
visual duration expansion over a wider range of auditory durations compared to
their younger counterparts. Results are discussed in terms of multisensory
integration and possible decision strategies that change with age.</p>