Measuring inhibitory control in emotionally dysregulated young and old adults using Stop Signal Paradigm
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Abstract
Inhibitory Control is the ability to supress pre-initiated responses, a fundamental executive
process sensitive to emotional context as well as age related cognitive change. Increasing
evidence show how emotional valence and emotion regulation difficulties independently
modulate inhibitory processes, however little research has studied these factors together in
young and old adult sample. The present study fills in this gap by examining how emotional
valence, age related differences and differences in emotional regulation among people
together influence inhibitory performance using Emotional Stop Signal Paradigm. A sample
64 participants (30 young; 34 old) was assessed on task and difficulties in emotion regulation. Negative emotional conditions showed greater inhibitory control performance which was
reflected by longer Stop Signal Delay (SSDs) and shorter Stop Signal Reaction Time (SSRT), indicating the increased caution of the cognitive system towards environmental threat. Older
Adults exhibited longer SSRTs compared to young adults suggesting the age-related slowing
of inhibitory mechanism. Importantly, young and old adults both were modulated by
emotional valence in similar manner, that can be interpreted through the Socioemotional
Selectivity Theory that reflects the. sophistication of emotion regulation resources with
increase in age. Higher scores in difficulties in emotion regulation scale were associated with
lower stop success, indicating that emotional dysregulation hampers the executive resources
needed for efficient response inhibition. Taken together, these findings highlight the process
of inhibitory control sensitive to emotional contexts, cognitive aging and individual
regulatory capacity, unfolding a meaningful understanding of real-world processing of
impulse control in emotional situations.
