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Springer, Memory and Cognition, 7(39), p. 1241-1252, 2011

DOI: 10.3758/s13421-011-0099-7

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Effect of age on dual-task performance in children and adults

Journal article published in 2011 by Mike Anderson, Romola S. Bucks ORCID, Donna M. Bayliss, Sergio Della Sala
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Age effects on dual-task costs were examined in healthy adults (Exp. 1) and in typically developing children (Exp. 2). In both experiments, individual differences in performance on the single-task components were titrated so that any age differences in dual-task costs could not be attributed to differences in single-task performance. Dual-task costs were found, but there were no age-related differences in these costs in older relative to younger adults, in 7-year-old relative to 9-year-old children, or across all four age groups. The results from these experiments suggest that previously reported age differences in dual-task costs, in both healthy ageing and child development, may be due to a failure to adequately equate single-task difficulty.