Frontiers in Psychology (Dec 2018)

Audio-Visual Spatiotemporal Perceptual Training Enhances the P300 Component in Healthy Older Adults

  • Weiping Yang,
  • Weiping Yang,
  • Ao Guo,
  • Yueying Li,
  • Jiajing Qiu,
  • Shengnan Li,
  • Shufei Yin,
  • Jianxin Chen,
  • Yanna Ren

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02537
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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In older adults, cognitive abilities, such as those associated with vision and hearing, generally decrease with age. According to several studies, audio-visual perceptual training can improve perceived competence regarding visual and auditory stimuli, suggesting that perceptual training is effective and beneficial. However, whether audio-visual perceptual training can induce far-transfer effects in other forms of untrained cognitive processing that are not directly trained in older adults remains unclear. In this study, the classic P300 component, a neurophysiological indicator of cognitive processing of a stimulus, was selected as an evaluation index of the training effect. We trained both young and older adults on the ability to judge the temporal and spatial consistency of visual and auditory stimuli. P300 amplitudes were significantly greater in the posttraining session than in the pretraining session in older adults (P = 0.001). However, perceptual training had no significant effect (P = 0.949) on the P300 component in young adults. Our results illustrate that audio-visual perceptual training can lead to far-transfer effects in healthy older adults. These findings highlight the robust malleability of the aging brain, and further provide evidence to motivate exploration to improve cognitive abilities in older adults.

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