Internet navigation skills for financial management: Associations with age, neurocognitive performance, and functional capacity.
Samina RahmanVictoria M KordovskiSavanna M TierneySteven Paul WoodsPublished in: Neuropsychology (2021)
Objective: Online banking is becoming increasingly common among middle-aged and older adults, who may experience difficulties effectively navigating this sometimes complicated technology. This study examined age effects on a performance-based internet banking task and its association with neurocognitive, functional, and numerical abilities. Method: Thirty-five older adults (age 51-75) and 50 younger adults (age 18-32) completed an experimenter-controlled online banking measure in which they independently performed a series of naturalistic financial tasks (e.g., account transfers, bill paying). Participants also completed standardized tests of cognition, numeracy, and functional capacity. Results: Older adults were markedly slower and less accurate in completing the internet-based banking task, which was not confounded by other demographic, mood, or computer use factors. Higher scores on measures of neurocognition, numeracy, and financial functional capacity were both strongly associated with higher internet-based banking among older, but not younger adults. Conclusions: Findings suggest that older adults experience difficultly quickly and accurately navigating online banking platforms, which may be partly related to age-related declines in neurocognitive functions and basic financial capacity. Future studies might examine whether neurocognitive approaches to remediation and compensation can be used to improve online banking capacity in older adults. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).