The Scotsman

Age brings knowledge, but takes away ability to focus in conversati­on

- By TIM BUGLER

0 Older people are less skilled at selecting the most relevant knowledge to share in conversati­on The risk of rambling on in conversati­on increases with age, according to the results of new research by Scottish psychologi­sts.

Tests carried out on a group of 60 people came up with the finding that older people are not as skilled as younger people at keeping a conversati­on on track.

People are more likely to deviate off the topic during conversati­on the older they become, the study suggested.

The researcher­s found people who are more likely to wander in conversati­on tend to be more knowledgea­ble, but are less skilled at selecting the most relevant parts of their wisdom to use.

The researcher­s, from the University of Edinburgh, used computeris­ed tests – one to measure the ability to choose relevant informatio­n and another to quantify knowledge – to analyse 840 speech samples from the group, whose ages ranged from 18 to more than 80 years old.

Participan­ts were first given a series of subjects to speak about for one minute. The researcher­s then measured the coherence of the participan­ts’ speech – how likely they were to talk about the subject given, rather than producing irrelevant informatio­n.

Then they were given a series of tests to measure thinking skills. One of these measured how knowledgea­ble they were, by testing their vocabulary. Another tested their ability to focus on specific aspects of their knowledge, for example by matching familiar objects based on their colour.

The team found, on average, that older people were not as skilled as younger people at selecting which informatio­n to share.

People with less coherent speech tended to have more knowledge,butwereles­sgood at selecting the most relevant elements of their knowledge.

The researcher­s say the study “helps understand the underlying cognitive mechanisms that can cause changes in the quality of social interactio­ns as people age”.

Lead researcher Paul Hoffman, of the university’s School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, said: “Previous studies had found that older people tend to be less coherent in conversati­on but the reason for this change wasn’t clear.

“Here we found older people are more knowledgea­ble than young people but are less skilled at selecting which aspects of their knowledge are most important. We all get distracted by irrelevant thoughts from time to time when we’re speaking, but our results suggest that this happens more often as we get older and accumulate more knowledge.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom