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Past research has demonstrated an age-related increase
in the Stroop effect. Some theorists have suggested that
this increase results from a decline in the ability to
inhibit word information on incongruent trials, whereas
others have suggested that the decline reflects general
slowing. These two hypotheses were evaluated using event-related
brain potentials (ERPs) measured while younger and older
adults performed the Stroop task. As expected, the Stroop
effect was greater for older than younger adults. The ERP
data revealed a selective age-related attenuation of two
modulations reflecting the inhibition of word information
on incongruent trials. Latency of the P3 wave did not increase
to a greater extend for older than younger adults from
the congruent to incongruent trials as expected based on
the general slowing hypothesis. Taken together, these findings
support the inhibitory deficit hypothesis by demonstrating
an age-related decline in a conceptual level inhibitory
process that supports the suppression of word information
in the Stroop task.
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