Title: THE EMOTIONAL STROOP TASK:
1- THE EMOTIONAL STROOP TASK
- DO INHIBITION DEFICITS IMPAIR OLDER ADULTS
ABILITY TO IGNORE EMOTIONAL WORDS? - Gabrielle Osborne
- Claremont Graduate University
- Deborah Burke and Lillian May
- Pomona College
- Cognitive Aging Conference, April, 2006
2Emotional processing well maintained in old age
- Older adults are adept at regulating emotions
- Socioemotional Selectivity Theory (SST) older
adults seek emotionally gratifying experiences by
focusing on positive information and avoiding
negative information more than young adults
(e.g., Carstensen, Isaacowitz, Charles, 1999
Carstensen Mikels, 2005 Mather Carstensen,
2003).
3Cognitive processes in the service of emotion
Age deficits?
- Resilience to aging declines- Memory. For
example - Mikels, Larkin, Reuter-Lorenz Carstensen
(2005) Better working memory performance for
older than young adults when positive emotional
pictures are involved. - May, Rahhal, Berry Leighton (2005) Age
declines in memory for context were eliminated
when the contextual information was emotional.
4Selective attention Does emotion affect
inhibitory processes in older adults?
- Inhibition Deficit model Inhibition becomes less
efficient with aging, impairing, for example,
selective attention in older adults - Stroop interference increases with age and some
researchers attribute this to age-linked
inhibition deficits (e.g., Spieler, Balota
Faust, 1996) - Stroop task proposed as an index of inhibition
efficiency
5Emotion Stroop
- Emotional words produce greater interference than
neutral words. - in normal participants
- In participants suffering from e.g., high
anxiety, depression or phobia for self-relevant
words. - Generally found for negative not positive
basewords (McKenna ( Sharma, 1995).
6Emotion Stroop and aging?
- Wurm, Labouvie-Vief, Aycock, Rebucal and Koch
(2004) - Old but not young showed increased Stroop
interference for high arousal basewords (e.g.,
killer). - Suggests emotional stimuli do not ameliorate
hypothesized inhibition deficits. - No emotion Stroop effect for young adults?
- Older adults less able to suppress negative
emotion words?
7Present Study
- Manipulated baseword valence
- Tested Stroop interference and incidental memory
for basewords
8Experiment 1 Manipulated valence of basewords
- Basewords 24 positive valence
- 24 negative valence
- 24 neutral (household items)
- Valence based on ratings by young and older
adults - Matched on frequency
- of syllables
- of letters
- Basewords appeared in red, green, blue or brown
9Mean valence ratings for basewords (1 very
negative, 7 very positive)
Older adults gt young adults on ratings, p lt .05
10Experiment 1 Procedure
- Presentation blocked by valence- 8 basewords per
block and blocks in random order. - Instructions Ignore the word and name the color
as quickly as possible. - Basewords appeared twice-- 144 trials
- After completion of Stroop trials, free recall of
basewords - Rating of basewords on valence
11HAPPY
Red
12EVIL
Blue
13TABLE
Green
14Participant Characteristics
- Young Old
- n 36 36
- Age (years) 19.4 73.2
- Vocabulary 34.1 36.2
- (Shipley)
- All participants native English speakers and in
good health. - p lt .05
15Color naming latencies by age and baseword
valence
800
742
750
731
728
negative
positive
Response Time (ms)
700
neutral
650
628
617
620
600
550
YOUNG
OLD
16Correct recall by age and baseword valence
4
3.5
negative
3
positive
2.39
2.5
2.06
neutral
Total Basewords Recalled
2
1.31
1.5
1.14
1.08
1
No significant Age effect
0.64
0.5
0
OLD
YOUNG
17Experiment 1Conclusions
- Magnitude and pattern of Stroop interference did
not differ for young and older adults - Stroop interference for negative valence
basewords gt neutral or positive basewords, which
did not differ. - Consistent with previous findings of emotion
Stroop for young adults and extends them to older
adults - Inconsistent with Wurm et al. (2004) who reported
greater interference for high arousal basewords
for old but not young adults - No evidence for a positivity bias in latency or
recall. Suggests that bias towards positive in
other tasks depends on conscious controlled
processing
18Could valence effects reflect differences in
arousal between positive and negative basewords?
Arousal not matched in E1
- Mean arousal rating for emotional basewords (ANEW
norms, Bradley Lang, 1999). - Positive lt Negative
- Experiment 2 controlled level of arousal to
determine if the emotion Stroop effect for
negative stimuli was due to greater arousal.
19Mean arousal ratings for basewords(9 point
scale)
1 The ANEW system did not contain ratings for all
the Neutral items
20Mean valence ratings for basewords (1 very
negative, 7 very positive)
1 The ANEW system did not contain ratings for all
the Neutral items
plt.05 Older adults rated these basewords higher
on the valence scale than young adults
21Color naming latencies by age and baseword
valence
22Recall by age and baseword valence
23Summary and ConclusionsAge effects
- In both experiments, young and older adults
showed the same pattern of negative emotion
Stroop effects and better memory for negative
emotion words. - No evidence for age-related inhibition deficits.
- Inhibition in the service of emotion regulation
is immune to age deficits
24Summary and ConclusionsValence effects
- No evidence for a positivity bias in latency or
recall. - Bias towards positive in other attention and
memory tasks depends on conscious, strategic
processing that is eliminated in Stroop selective
attention - Processing of negative emotional stimuli is more
automatic and intrusive relative to positive
stimuli
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26Osborne, Burke Clausen, 2006
Blue
Negative condition
27Osborne, Burke Clausen, 2006
Brown
Negative_neutral condition
28Osborne, Burke Clausen, 2006
Red
Positive condition
29Osborne, Burke Clausen, 2006
Green
Positive_neutral condition
30Experiment 1Results
plt.01 latencies were slower for negative than
negative_neutral trials
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