Author(s): Devine S; Neumann C; Levari D; Eppinger B;
Prevalence-induced concept change describes a cognitive mechanism by which someone's definition of a concept shifts as the prevalence of instances of that concept changes. While this phenomenon has been established in young adults, it is unclear how it affects older adults. In this study, we explore how prevalence-induced concept change affects older ...
Article GUID: 36253591
Author(s): Devine S; Neumann C; Otto AR; Bolenz F; Reiter A; Eppinger B;
Previous work suggests that lifespan developmental differences in cognitive control reflect maturational and aging-related changes in prefrontal cortex functioning. However, complementary explanations exist: It could be that children and older adults differ from younger adults in how they balance the effort of engaging in control against its potential ben ...
Article GUID: 34384965
Author(s): Ruel A; Devine S; Eppinger B;
Over the last decade, research on cognitive control and decision-making has revealed that individuals weigh the costs and benefits of engaging in or refraining from control and that whether and how they engage in these cost-benefit analyses may change across development and during healthy aging. In the present article, we examine how lifespan age differen ...
Article GUID: 33590729
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