# Effects of aging and valence on emotional response inhibition: conclusions from a novel stop-signal task

**Authors:** Jill D. Waring, Stephanie N. Hartling

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1568492 · 2025-04-09

## TL;DR

This study explores how aging affects the ability to inhibit emotional responses, finding that older adults struggle more with response execution but not inhibition.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel stop-signal task to examine emotional response inhibition in older and younger adults.

## Key findings

- Older adults showed less efficient stopping than younger adults in emotional response inhibition tasks.
- Emotional valence did not affect stopping efficiency in either age group.
- Aging and emotion interacted during response execution, with older adults performing worse on unpleasant go-image trials.

## Abstract

Emotional and cognitive processes interact in myriad ways during daily life, and the relation between emotion and cognition changes across the lifespan. Aging is associated with decreasing cognitive control and inhibition alongside improvements in emotional control and regulation. However, little is known about how aging impacts response inhibition within emotionally relevant contexts. The current study examined how aging impacts emotional response inhibition by comparing older and younger adults’ ability to stop responses to emotional images. Participants completed a novel stop-signal task where pleasant and unpleasant scene images appeared on a minority of trials, while participants developed a pre-potent ‘go’ response during trials presenting neutral shapes. Notably, in each task block only one of the two types of emotional scene images served as a task-relevant stop cue, e.g., unpleasant images as stop-signals. Accordingly, in a given task block participants should continue to respond at the onset of the other type of emotional image (i.e., pleasant scenes as ‘go-images’). Overall, older adults exhibited less efficient stopping than younger adults. However, stopping did not differ between pleasant and unpleasant images in either age group. Thus, while response inhibition is less efficient in older adults, it does not differ by emotion across adulthood. The innovative design also permitted exploratory analyses of responses to images that were not the current stop-signal, i.e., responses correctly executed for ‘go-image’ trials. In contrast with response inhibition on stop trials, emotion and aging significantly interacted during response execution, with older adults performing less accurately than younger adults on unpleasant go-image trials. Taken together, aging interacts with emotion only for response execution but not response inhibition for emotional scenes. This study offers new insights into the effects of aging on response inhibition in emotionally complex contexts and increases the ecological validity of response inhibition research. It also highlights the distinct effects of aging and emotion on response execution versus inhibition for task-relevant emotional information.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** bleeding wound (MESH:D014947), anxiety (MESH:D001007), neurodegenerative disorders (MESH:D019636), bipolar disorder (MESH:D001714), depression (MESH:D003866), cancer (MESH:D009369), vision or hearing problems (MESH:D054062), stroke (MESH:D020521), brain tumor (MESH:D001932), Asperger's syndrome (MESH:D020817), alcoholism (MESH:D000437), Parkinson's, Huntington's (MESH:D010300), head injury (MESH:D006259), substance abuse (MESH:D019966), tremors (MESH:D014202), Autism Spectrum Disorder (MESH:D000067877), multiple sclerosis (MESH:D009103), PTSD (MESH:D013313), schizophrenia (MESH:D012559), anxiety disorders (MESH:D001008), cognitive impairment (MESH:D003072), seizure disorder (MESH:D004827), fire (MESH:D000092422), memory impairment (MESH:D008569), anxious arousal (MESH:D020921), mental illness (MESH:D001523), fatigue (MESH:D005221)
- **Chemicals:** opiates (MESH:D053610)
- **Species:** Mus musculus (house mouse, species) [taxon 10090], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12020514/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12020514