Age-related reorganization of encoding networks directly influences subsequent recognition memory

Danielle J. Tisserand , Anthony R. McIntosh , Freddy M. van der Veen , Walter H. Backes , Jelle Jolles
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to link performance-related brain activity during two word encoding tasks to subsequent recognition for those words in young and older adults. There were no significant group differences in performance during encoding, but the young subjects performed better than the older at the recognition task. Performance-related brain networks strongly differed between the two groups. In young subjects, there were two networks associated with performance, one related to encoding (mainly involving premotor and parietal brain regions) and the other to recognition (involving middle frontal, and lateral and medial temporal regions), whereas the network for older subjects (including prefrontal, premotor, lateral and medial temporal regions) was associated both with encoding and recognition. Areas in this network strongly overlapped with those supporting recognition in the young subjects (e.g., medial temporal lobe), suggesting that older subjects may have recruited these areas to maintain performance during encoding. However, this reorganization of brain networks appears to have come at the cost of subsequent recognition.

年龄相关的编码网络重组直接影响后续的识别记忆
研究人员使用功能性磁共振成像技术,将年轻人和老年人在两个单词编码任务中与表现相关的大脑活动与随后对这些单词的识别联系起来。在编码过程中,各组表现没有显著差异,但年轻受试者在识别任务中的表现优于年长受试者。与表现相关的大脑网络在两组之间存在明显差异。在年轻受试者中,有两个与表现相关的网络,一个与编码有关(主要涉及前运动和顶叶脑区),另一个与识别有关(涉及额叶中部、外侧和内侧颞区),而老年受试者的网络(包括前额叶、前运动、外侧和内侧颞区)既与编码又与识别有关。该网络的区域与年轻受试者的支持识别的区域(例如内侧颞叶)强烈重叠,这表明老年受试者可能已经招募了这些区域来维持编码期间的表现。然而,大脑网络的这种重组似乎是以随后的识别为代价的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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