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Exploring age-related differences in virtual maze navigation: the impact of external cues on search-strategy

Exploring age-related differences in virtual maze navigation: the impact of external cues on search-strategy
Exploring age-related differences in virtual maze navigation: the impact of external cues on search-strategy
Visuospatial navigation problems represent a significant challenge to quality of life in older adults. We have previously shown that, in a virtual honeycomb-shaped maze (in which participants face numerous sequential Left/Right junctions; honeycomb free-movement pattern [FMP] Y-maze), younger individuals (18−40) typically adopt a strategy of alternating their turns at successive junctions, while those aged ≥ 70 show significantly fewer alternations, potentially due to diminished visuospatial working memory. However, reduced alternation could also reflect decreased exploratory drive in older adults, characterized by diminished intrinsic motivation to engage with novel environments. Here, we explored whether alternation patterns reflect working memory processes, hypothesizing that reductions in alternation among older adults may be linked to spatial working memory deficits. To test this, we first measured visuospatial working memory using the Corsi block tapping test and found a strong positive correlation between Corsi performance and alternation in the honeycomb FMP Y-maze, providing direct empirical support that alternation is working memory-dependent. We also found a significant negative correlation between Corsi and repetition, suggesting that repetition is a lower-demand alter- native to alternation. We then introduced distal cues to facilitate orientation, and showed participants a map of the maze to help familiarize them with the environment. Distal cues were in- tended to reduce memory load by providing clear orientation markers, whereas the map was designed to increase exploratory drive by enhancing participants’ spatial confidence. When provided with distal cues, older adults increased their sequential alternations, whereas the map condition did not have the same effect. These findings suggest that spatial memory limitations in older adults affect navigational choices, with alternation being a memory-dependent strategy and repetition potentially offering a lower-effort alternative. This could have implications for designing environments to enhance independence in older adults and in the design of cognitive tests for spatial working memory.
Aging, Cognitive decline, Honeycomb FMP Y-Maze, Visuospatial working memory
0023-9690
Parker, Matthew O.
c0074db2-b82c-47ba-a9b9-e42f278eeeb3
Rolfe-Tarrant, Jude
f3e7d316-65a9-47dd-8694-b8f57203bfe1
Wood, Antony
74e8ed07-c804-4d24-a5f8-7f2388cd556a
Redhead, Edward S.
d2342759-2c77-45ef-ac0f-9f70aa5db0df
Parker, Matthew O.
c0074db2-b82c-47ba-a9b9-e42f278eeeb3
Rolfe-Tarrant, Jude
f3e7d316-65a9-47dd-8694-b8f57203bfe1
Wood, Antony
74e8ed07-c804-4d24-a5f8-7f2388cd556a
Redhead, Edward S.
d2342759-2c77-45ef-ac0f-9f70aa5db0df

Parker, Matthew O., Rolfe-Tarrant, Jude, Wood, Antony and Redhead, Edward S. (2025) Exploring age-related differences in virtual maze navigation: the impact of external cues on search-strategy. Learning and Motivation, 90, [102128]. (doi:10.1016/j.lmot.2025.102128).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Visuospatial navigation problems represent a significant challenge to quality of life in older adults. We have previously shown that, in a virtual honeycomb-shaped maze (in which participants face numerous sequential Left/Right junctions; honeycomb free-movement pattern [FMP] Y-maze), younger individuals (18−40) typically adopt a strategy of alternating their turns at successive junctions, while those aged ≥ 70 show significantly fewer alternations, potentially due to diminished visuospatial working memory. However, reduced alternation could also reflect decreased exploratory drive in older adults, characterized by diminished intrinsic motivation to engage with novel environments. Here, we explored whether alternation patterns reflect working memory processes, hypothesizing that reductions in alternation among older adults may be linked to spatial working memory deficits. To test this, we first measured visuospatial working memory using the Corsi block tapping test and found a strong positive correlation between Corsi performance and alternation in the honeycomb FMP Y-maze, providing direct empirical support that alternation is working memory-dependent. We also found a significant negative correlation between Corsi and repetition, suggesting that repetition is a lower-demand alter- native to alternation. We then introduced distal cues to facilitate orientation, and showed participants a map of the maze to help familiarize them with the environment. Distal cues were in- tended to reduce memory load by providing clear orientation markers, whereas the map was designed to increase exploratory drive by enhancing participants’ spatial confidence. When provided with distal cues, older adults increased their sequential alternations, whereas the map condition did not have the same effect. These findings suggest that spatial memory limitations in older adults affect navigational choices, with alternation being a memory-dependent strategy and repetition potentially offering a lower-effort alternative. This could have implications for designing environments to enhance independence in older adults and in the design of cognitive tests for spatial working memory.

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Parker et al_LM_2025_accepted - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 9 April 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 April 2025
Published date: 16 April 2025
Keywords: Aging, Cognitive decline, Honeycomb FMP Y-Maze, Visuospatial working memory

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 501567
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501567
ISSN: 0023-9690
PURE UUID: c6e59458-afa3-4018-859a-b721a37d3bce
ORCID for Antony Wood: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1257-1877
ORCID for Edward S. Redhead: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7771-1228

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Date deposited: 03 Jun 2025 17:08
Last modified: 04 Jun 2025 01:37

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Contributors

Author: Matthew O. Parker
Author: Jude Rolfe-Tarrant
Author: Antony Wood ORCID iD

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