Multi-target visual search organisation across the lifespan: cancellation task performance in a large and demographically stratified sample of healthy adults

Publication date

2019

Authors

Benjamins, Jeroen S.ORCID 0000-0003-4341-7167ISNI 0000000389242606
Dalmaijer, Edwin S
ten Brink, A.F.ORCID 0000-0001-7634-0819ISNI 0000000492496380
Nijboer, TanjaISNI 0000000390969706
van der Stigchel, S.ISNI 0000000396732697

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Accurate tests of cognition are vital in (neuro)psychology. Cancellation tasks are popular tests of attention and executive function, in which participants find and 'cancel' targets among distractors. Despite extensive use in neurological patients, it remains unclear whether demographic variables (that vary among patients) affect cancellation performance. Here, we describe performance in 523 healthy participants of a web-based cancellation task. Age, sex, and level of education did not affect cancellation performance in this sample. We provide norm scores for indices of spatial bias, perseverations, revisits, processing speed, and search organisation. Furthermore, a cluster analysis identified four cognitive profiles among participants, characterised by many omissions (N=18), many revisits (N=18), relatively poor search organisation (N=125), and relatively good search organisation (N=362). Thus, patient scores pertaining to search organisation should be interpreted cautiously: Given the large proportion of healthy individuals with poor search organisation, disorganised search in patients might be pre-existing rather than disorder-related.

Keywords

Cancellation test, attention, search organisation, cognitive phenotyping, norm scores, Taverne

Citation

Benjamins, J S, Dalmaijer, E S, Ten Brink, A F, Nijboer, T C W & Van der Stigchel, S 2019, 'Multi-target visual search organisation across the lifespan : cancellation task performance in a large and demographically stratified sample of healthy adults', Neuropsychology, development, and cognition. Section B, Aging, neuropsychology and cognition, vol. 26, no. 5, pp. 731-748. https://doi.org/10.1080/13825585.2018.1521508