The effect of aging on the (mis)perception of intentionality - an ERP study. Pasion, R., Fernandes, C., Gonçalves, A. R., Ferreira-Santos, F., Páscoa, R., Barbosa, F., & Marques-Teixeira, J. Social Neuroscience, 14(2):149–161, 2019.
The effect of aging on the (mis)perception of intentionality - an ERP study [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Despite the accumulated knowledge on moral decision-making in the early stages of development, empirical evidence is still limited in the old-aged adults. The current study contributes to unveil the neural correlates of judgments of moral transgressions as a function of aging, by examining the temporal dynamics of neural activation elicited by intentional and accidental harmful actions in three groups of healthy participants: young adults (18–35), adults (40–55), and older adults (60–75). Older adults were slower and less accurate in rating intentionality, compared to the younger groups. In ERP analysis, the older group showed increased P2 amplitude, which was predicted by poorer performance on neuropsychological tests. Reduced amplitudes were found on critical ERP components to moral cognition (N2 and LPP), namely while processing intentional harmful scenarios. Older adults seem to allocate more attentional resources (P2) to the task, probably to compensate the age-related decline in executive functioning, while younger groups show a pronounced negativity while detecting harm (N2) and increased neural activation to encode the intentions behind the acts (LPP).
@article{pasion_effect_2019,
	title = {The effect of aging on the (mis)perception of intentionality - an {ERP} study},
	volume = {14},
	issn = {1747-0919},
	url = {https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17470919.2018.1430614},
	doi = {10.1080/17470919.2018.1430614},
	abstract = {Despite the accumulated knowledge on moral decision-making in the early stages of development, empirical evidence is still limited in the old-aged adults. The current study contributes to unveil the neural correlates of judgments of moral transgressions as a function of aging, by examining the temporal dynamics of neural activation elicited by intentional and accidental harmful actions in three groups of healthy participants: young adults (18–35), adults (40–55), and older adults (60–75). Older adults were slower and less accurate in rating intentionality, compared to the younger groups. In ERP analysis, the older group showed increased P2 amplitude, which was predicted by poorer performance on neuropsychological tests. Reduced amplitudes were found on critical ERP components to moral cognition (N2 and LPP), namely while processing intentional harmful scenarios. Older adults seem to allocate more attentional resources (P2) to the task, probably to compensate the age-related decline in executive functioning, while younger groups show a pronounced negativity while detecting harm (N2) and increased neural activation to encode the intentions behind the acts (LPP).},
	number = {2},
	urldate = {2019-05-01},
	journal = {Social Neuroscience},
	author = {Pasion, R. and Fernandes, C. and Gonçalves, A. R. and Ferreira-Santos, F. and Páscoa, R. and Barbosa, F. and Marques-Teixeira, J.},
	year = {2019},
	pmid = {29347878},
	keywords = {LPP, N2, P2, aging, moral},
	pages = {149--161},
}

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