Abstract
Research into the effects of aging on response time has focused on Brinley plots. Brinley plots are constructed by plotting mean response times for older subjects against those for young subjects for a set of experimental conditions. The typical result is a straight line with a slope greater than 1 and a negative intercept. This linear function has been interpreted as showing that aging leads to a general slowing of cognitive processes. In this article, we show that the slope of the Brinley plot is actually a measure of the relative standard deviations of older versus young subjects’ response times; it is not a measure of general slowing. We examine current models of the effects of aging on mean response time and show how they might be reinterpreted. We also show how a more comprehensive model, Ratcliff’s diffusion model (1978), can account for Brinley plot regularities and, at the same time, provide an account of accuracy rates, the shapes of response time distributions, and the relative speeds of error and correct response times, aspects of the data about which models designed to account for Brinley plots are mute. We conclude by endorsing a research approach that applies explicit models to response time data in aging in order to use the parameters of the model to interpret the effects of aging.
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This research was supported by National Institute of Mental Health Grant HD MH44640 and National Institute for Deafness and other Communication Disorders Grant R01-DC01240.
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Ratcliff, R., Spieler, D. & Mckoon, G. Explicitly modeling the effects of aging on response time. Psychon Bull Rev 7, 1–25 (2000). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03210723
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03210723