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  Vol. 51 No. 4, April 1994 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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The Impact of Aging on Curiosity as Measured by Exploratory Eye Movements

Kirk R. Daffner, MD; Leonard F. M. Scinto, PhD; Sandra Weintraub, PhD; Joan Guinessey; M-Marsel Mesulam, MD

Arch Neurol. 1994;51(4):368-376.


Abstract

Objective
To investigate changes in novelty-seeking behavior (curiosity) associated with normal aging.

Background
Recently, we demonstrated that patients with a diagnosis of probable Alzheimer's disease display diminished novelty-seeking behavior as measured by exploratory eye movements. Nondemented, elderly individuals are often depicted in clinical descriptions as exhibiting diminished curiosity and increased disengagement from their surroundings. However, this behavior has not been systematically investigated as a function of normal aging.

Setting
University hospital center studying aging and dementia.

Subjects
Fourteen active, healthy elderly subjects (mean age, 72 years) and 16 middle-aged subjects (mean age, 42 years) matched for education and estimated IQ.

Measures
Exploratory eye movements were recorded in response to visual stimuli that varied in novelty, complexity, and incongruity.

Results
Both older and middle-aged subjects (1) spent significantly more time exploring the more irregular or incongruous of two simultaneously presented stimuli, (2) spent increasingly less time looking at a repeating visual stimulus paired with a stimulus that changed with each trial, and (3) exhibited the same degree of overall exploration of a visual scene and devoted an approximately equal amount of attention to an unexpected element within it. As a group, older subjects spent slightly less time than middle-aged subjects examining incongruous stimuli. However, 71% (10/14) of older subjects performed within 1 SD of the mean of middle-aged subjects and 21% (3/14) performed as well as the top 50% (8/16) of middle-aged controls.

Conclusions
The drive for curiosity, as measured by exploratory eye movements, can be well preserved in older individuals. Further research is needed to determine if the integrity of this drive can serve as a marker of "successful aging" and to identify which physiological and psychological factors influence its preservation through the life cycle.



Author Affiliations

From the Bullard and Denny-Brown Laboratories, the Division of Behavioral Neurology and Neuroscience of the Harvard Neurology Department, and the Charles A. Dana Research Institute of the Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, Mass.



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