Spoken sentence processing in young and older adults modulated by task demands: evidence from self-paced listening.

Young and older adult listeners paced themselves through recorded sentences, under instructions to recall the sentence verbatim or to respond to comprehension probes. Sentences varied in syntactic complexity and speech rate. Young and older adults paused longer after major syntactic boundaries, an effect that was constant across speech rates but became more pronounced with increasing syntactic complexity. These effects were moderated by listeners' expectations of what they were to do with the linguistic input and by their recent experience with particular tasks. Older adults tended to pause longer in the recall condition, especially when it preceded the comprehension condition. Young adults paused differentially longer at major syntactic boundaries in the comprehension condition, but only when the comprehension condition preceded the recall condition. These findings are discussed in the context of two competing theories of syntactic processing.

[1]  William D. Marslen-Wilson,et al.  Function and process in spoken word recognition: A tutorial review , 1984 .

[2]  Matthew Flatt,et al.  PsyScope: An interactive graphic system for designing and controlling experiments in the psychology laboratory using Macintosh computers , 1993 .

[3]  A. Wingfield,et al.  Speech Rate and Syntactic Complexity as Multiplicative Factors in Speech Comprehension by Young and Older Adults , 2003 .

[4]  C Hertzog,et al.  Relationships between metamemory, memory predictions, and memory task performance in adults. , 1990, Psychology and aging.

[5]  M. Just,et al.  From the SelectedWorks of Marcel Adam Just 1992 A capacity theory of comprehension : Individual differences in working memory , 2017 .

[6]  J. J. Ryan,et al.  Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-III , 2001 .

[7]  Murray Grossman,et al.  Dissociable patterns of brain activity during comprehension of rapid and syntactically complex speech: Evidence from fMRI , 2004, Brain and Language.

[8]  G. Waters,et al.  Working memory and online syntactic processing in Alzheimer's disease: studies with auditory moving window presentation. , 2002, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.

[9]  Timothy A. Salthouse,et al.  Theoretical Perspectives on Cognitive Aging , 1991 .

[10]  Susan Kemper,et al.  Language and Aging , 1989, Annual Review of Applied Linguistics.

[11]  A Wingfield,et al.  Age differences in processing information from television news: the effects of bisensory augmentation. , 1990, Journal of gerontology.

[12]  Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow,et al.  On-line processing of written text by younger and older adults. , 1990 .

[13]  M. Lachman,et al.  Self-efficacy and attributions for intellectual performance in young and elderly adults. , 1984, Journal of gerontology.

[14]  David Caplan,et al.  Age, working memory, and on-line syntactic processing in sentence comprehension. , 2001 .

[15]  A Wingfield,et al.  Regaining lost time: adult aging and the effect of time restoration on recall of time-compressed speech. , 1999, Psychology and aging.

[16]  E. Stine-Morrow,et al.  Patterns of resource allocation are reliable among younger and older readers. , 2001, Psychology and aging.

[17]  M. Just,et al.  Brain Activation Modulated by Sentence Comprehension , 1996, Science.

[18]  P. H. Miller The development of strategies of selective attention. , 1990 .

[19]  S. Colcombe,et al.  The impact of stereotype threat on age differences in memory performance. , 2003, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.

[20]  G. Radvansky Aging, Memory, and Comprehension , 1999 .

[21]  David F. Bjorklund,et al.  Children's strategies: Contemporary views of cognitive development. , 1991 .

[22]  J. Gee,et al.  Neural basis for sentence comprehension: Grammatical and short‐term memory components , 2002, Human brain mapping.

[23]  Arthur Wingfield,et al.  Regaining lost time: adult aging and the effect of time restoration on recall of time-compressed speech. , 1999, Psychology and aging.

[24]  On-line syntactic processing under concurrent memory load , 2003, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[25]  H. Goodglass,et al.  Effects of age and hearing sensitivity on the use of prosodic information in spoken word recognition. , 2000, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[26]  E. Gibson Linguistic complexity: locality of syntactic dependencies , 1998, Cognition.

[27]  D. Bouwhuis,et al.  Attention and performance X : control of language processes , 1986 .

[28]  G. Waters,et al.  Verbal working memory and sentence comprehension , 1999, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[29]  G. Waters,et al.  Age, working memory, and on-line syntactic processing in sentence comprehension. , 2001, Psychology and aging.

[30]  A. Wingfield,et al.  Multiple memory systems in the processing of speech: evidence from aging. , 1995, Experimental aging research.

[31]  L Hasher,et al.  Instructional manipulations and age differences in memory: now you see them, now you don't. , 2001, Psychology and aging.

[32]  D. Wechsler Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale , 2021, Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science.

[33]  D. Kausler Learning and memory in normal aging , 1994 .

[34]  E. Stine-Morrow,et al.  Age differences in on-line syntactic processing. , 2000, Experimental aging research.

[35]  F Ferreira,et al.  Exploring the use of prosody during language comprehension using the auditory moving window technique , 1996, Journal of psycholinguistic research.

[36]  M. Williams,et al.  Age and forgetfulness: confidence in ability and attribution for memory failures. , 1996, Psychology and aging.

[37]  P. Gordon Organizational Strategies , 1970 .

[38]  A. Wingfield,et al.  Organizational strategies in immediate recall of rapid speech by young and elderly adults. , 1986, Experimental aging research.

[39]  Tessa C. Warren,et al.  The influence of referential processing on sentence complexity , 2002, Cognition.

[40]  J. Henderson,et al.  Effects of lexical frequency and syntactic complexity in spoken-language comprehension: Evidence from the auditory moving-window technique. , 1996 .

[41]  E. E. Green,et al.  7 I Believe, Therefore I Can: Self-Efficacy Beliefs in Memory Aging , 1990 .

[42]  Paul E. Gold,et al.  Multiple memory systems , 2004, Neurobiology of Learning and Memory.

[43]  Michael J Kahana,et al.  The dynamics of memory retrieval in older adulthood. , 2002, Canadian journal of experimental psychology = Revue canadienne de psychologie experimentale.

[44]  Eugene A. Lovelace,et al.  Aging and cognition : mental processes, self-awareness, and interventions , 1990 .

[45]  D. Kieras Component processes in the comprehension of simple prose , 1981 .

[46]  H Lane,et al.  Perception of reading rate by speakers and listeners. , 1973, Journal of experimental psychology.

[47]  Norman M. White Multiple memory systems , 2007, Scholarpedia.

[48]  F. Craik,et al.  The handbook of aging and cognition , 1992 .