Decoding the impact of aging on the interaction between visual attention and working memory

Bibliographic Details
Title: Decoding the impact of aging on the interaction between visual attention and working memory
Authors: Dempere Marco, Laura, Balagué Marmaña, Marta, Martínez Garcia, Marina, Universitat de Vic - Universitat Central de Catalunya. Facultat de Ciències, Tecnologia i Enginyeries
Contributors: Universitat de Vic - Universitat Central de Catalunya. Facultat de Ciències, Tecnologia i Enginyeries, Institut de Recerca i Innovació en Ciències de la Vida i de la Salut a la Catalunya Central (IRIS-CC), Hospital de Sant Joan Despí Moisès Broggi, Universitat Jaume I
Source: Sci Rep
RiUVic. Repositori institucional de la UVic-UCC
instname
Scientific Reports, Vol 15, Iss 1, Pp 1-17 (2025)
Publisher Information: Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: Aging, Envelliment, Science, Working memory, Medicine, Neurociència cognitiva, Visió, Visual attention, Article, Memòria
Description: Working memory (WM) is a temporally structured process with three subprocesses: encoding, maintenance, and retrieval. Encoding is essential for information entry into WM, particularly under limited processing resources, and is closely tied to visual attention, which selectively gates items into WM. This study examines the interaction between visual attention and WM across the lifespan, focusing on age-related changes. Using a delayed-match-to-sample task to assess WM, we tracked eye movements to analyse attentional deployment during encoding. Our results replicate previous findings of age-related declines in task performance and WM capacity, attributable to less thorough scrutiny of memory sets and diminished benefit from fixating on subsequently queried items among older participants. Task difficulty exacerbates these declines, with performance collapsing when memory loads exceed WM capacity -a pattern that begins around age 55 and becomes pronounced in later life. These results emphasise the crucial role of visual attention in WM encoding and its age-related modulation. Furthermore, our findings call into question the strict binary distinction between sequential and simultaneous processing, suggesting that serial effects in WM might emerge even under conditions of simultaneous presentations.
Document Type: Article
Other literature type
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
ISSN: 2045-2322
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-00305-x
Access URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10854/180203
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-00305-x
https://doaj.org/article/53a6bec15e5b4fd18a02afb7d1077914
Rights: CC BY NC ND
Accession Number: edsair.doi.dedup.....fab143d95aa5007751631e2bd1d74e7d
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
ISSN:20452322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-025-00305-x