Cognitive training and retest learning effects on theta and alpha power in older and young adults: A perspective on the crunch hypothesis and the STAC-R model

IF 5.3 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Ludmiła Zając-Lamparska , Emilia Zabielska-Mendyk , Dariusz Zapała , Paweł Augustynowicz
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

According to the STAC-R model, scaffolding enhancement is achievable through various interventions. Indicating forms of compensatory scaffolding, the STAC-R model refers to phenomena described in other theoretical models, such as the enhanced fronto-parietal recruitment described in the CRUNCH hypothesis. The presented study investigated whether working memory training can induce compensatory scaffolding in older adults through increased prefrontal and parietal involvement (indicated by changes in theta and alpha power). The sample comprised 90 individuals, including 45 participants from the experimental (22 older and 23 young adults) and 45 from the passive control group (21 older and 24 young adults). The age range was 60–75 years for older adults and 20–35 years for young adults. We assessed the effects of a 12-session working memory training with the use of the adaptive n-back task on theta and alpha power measured in frontal midline and central-parietal areas by EEG in older and young adults during the n-back task performance at three difficulty levels. At the behavioral level, we found a positive, significant improvement in cognitive performance in young adults from experimental group. In contrast, the positive changes in older adults were too small to prove statistically significant. At the level of neuronal activity, we observed not a training effect but a retest effect. It was revealed primarily for theta oscillations in older adults and manifested by increased theta power with higher task demands and equalization of theta power of older and younger persons in the post-test. For alpha oscillations, the retest effect was negligible, and its only manifestation observed in older adults was a reduction in the dependence of alpha power on task difficulty. The study results indicate limited potential for improving WM performance in older adults compared to young adults. The presence of the retest learning effect, instead of the training effect, proved that familiarity with the task was crucial, rather than regular training of its performance. Changes observed in older adults in theta power can be considered positive, and these results are consistent with the CRUNCH hypothesis of a compensatory role for increased executive control involvement. In turn, changes in the alpha power in the same group should be considered rather maladaptive. Nevertheless, given the overall study findings, it can be concluded that although the behavioral effects of training are stronger in young adults, the changes in neuronal activity resulting from the retest learning effect are more marked in older adults.
认知训练和重测学习对老年人和年轻人theta和alpha功率的影响:嘎口假说和STAC-R模型的视角
根据STAC-R模型,通过各种干预措施可以实现脚手架增强。作为代偿性支架的形式,STAC-R模型引用了其他理论模型中描述的现象,例如CRUNCH假说中描述的额顶叶招募增强。本研究调查了工作记忆训练是否可以通过增加前额叶和顶叶受累(通过theta和alpha功率的变化表明)来诱导老年人的代偿性支架。样本由90人组成,其中45人来自实验组(22名老年人和23名年轻人),45人来自被动对照组(21名老年人和24名年轻人)。老年人的年龄范围为60-75岁,年轻人为20-35岁。本研究评估了采用自适应n-back任务的12次工作记忆训练对老年人和年轻人在三个难度水平的n-back任务中额中线和中央顶叶区的脑电图和α功率的影响。在行为层面,我们发现实验组的年轻人在认知表现上有积极的、显著的改善。相比之下,老年人的积极变化太小,不足以证明具有统计学意义。在神经元活动水平上,我们观察到的不是训练效应,而是重测效应。这主要表现在老年人的θ波振荡中,并在后测中表现为随着任务需求的增加而增加的θ波功率以及老年人和年轻人的θ波功率趋于平衡。对于α振荡,重测效应可以忽略不计,其在老年人中观察到的唯一表现是α功率对任务难度的依赖性降低。研究结果表明,与年轻人相比,老年人改善WM表现的潜力有限。重测学习效应的存在,而不是训练效应,证明了对任务的熟悉程度,而不是对其表现的定期训练是至关重要的。在老年人中观察到的θ波功率的变化可以被认为是积极的,这些结果与CRUNCH假说一致,即执行控制参与的代偿作用增加。反过来,在同一群体中,阿尔法权力的变化应该被认为是相当不适应的。尽管如此,从整体研究结果来看,我们可以得出这样的结论:尽管训练的行为效应在年轻人中更强,但由重测学习效应引起的神经元活动变化在老年人中更为明显。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.70
自引率
5.70%
发文量
38
审稿时长
33 days
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology is dedicated to publishing manuscripts with a strong emphasis on both basic and applied research, encompassing experimental, clinical, and theoretical contributions that advance the fields of Clinical and Health Psychology. With a focus on four core domains—clinical psychology and psychotherapy, psychopathology, health psychology, and clinical neurosciences—the IJCHP seeks to provide a comprehensive platform for scholarly discourse and innovation. The journal accepts Original Articles (empirical studies) and Review Articles. Manuscripts submitted to IJCHP should be original and not previously published or under consideration elsewhere. All signing authors must unanimously agree on the submitted version of the manuscript. By submitting their work, authors agree to transfer their copyrights to the Journal for the duration of the editorial process.
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