Age-related prefrontal cortex activation in associative memory: an fNIRS pilot study

Talamonti, Deborah, Clark, Dan, Montgomery, Catharine and Bruno, Davide (2020) Age-related prefrontal cortex activation in associative memory: an fNIRS pilot study. [Data Collection]

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Abstract

Older adults typically perform more poorly than younger adults in free recall memory tests. This age-related deficit has been linked to decline of brain activation and brain prefrontal lateralization, which may be the result of compensatory mechanisms. In the present study, we investigated the effect of age on prefrontal cortex (PFC) activation during performance of a task that requires memory associations (temporal vs. spatial clustering), using functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS). Ten younger adults, ten cognitively high-performing older individuals, and ten low-performing older individuals completed a free recall task, where either a temporal or spatial strategy (but not both simultaneously) could be employed to retrieve groups of same-category stimuli, whilst changes in PFC haemodynamics were recorded by means of a 12-channel fNIRS system. The results suggest PFC lateralization in younger adults and opposite patterns in high-performing older adults, whereas low-performers showed no clear lateralization. Moreover, age did not affect use of memory organization, given that temporal clustering was preferred over spatial clustering in all groups. These findings are in line with previous literature on the aging brain and on temporal organization of memory. Our results also suggest that the PFC may be specifically involved in memory for temporal associations. Future research may consider whether age-related deficits in temporal organization may be an early sign of PFC pathology and possible neurodegeneration.

Creators: Talamonti, Deborah, Clark, Dan, Montgomery, Catharine and Bruno, Davide
Uncontrolled Keywords: memory; temporal contiguity; fNIRS; older adults; prefrontal cortex
DOI: https://doi.org/10.24377/LJMU.d.00000079
Division: Psychology (new Sep 2019)
Field of Research: Health sciences
Health sciences > Public health
Date Deposited: 27 Jul 2020 14:04
Last Modified: 08 Feb 2024 16:59
Related resources:
URI: https://opendata.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/79
Data collection method: Older and younger adults; lab tested for memory and brain activity with fNIRS.
Resource language: English
Metadata language: English
Collection period:
FromTo
8 January 201830 August 2019

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