Age-Related Effects on ERP and Oscillatory EEG-Dynamics in a 2-Back Task
It is well known that working memory is one of the most vulnerable cognitive functions in elderly. However, little is known about the neuronal underpinnings and temporal dynamics of working memory mechanisms in healthy aging which are necessary to understand the age-related changes. To this end, 36...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of psychophysiology 2014-01, Vol.28 (3), p.162-177 |
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Zusammenfassung: | It is well known that working memory is one of the most vulnerable cognitive
functions in elderly. However, little is known about the neuronal underpinnings
and temporal dynamics of working memory mechanisms in healthy aging which are
necessary to understand the age-related changes. To this end, 36 young and 36
old healthy individuals performed a 2-back task and a 0-back control task, while
the electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded. Participants were instructed to
press a response key whenever a target appeared and not to respond in case of
nontargets. Expectedly, older participants showed considerably slower RTs and
significantly higher rates of omitted targets and false alarms than young
participants in the 2-back task, whereas no age-group difference in detection
rate was found in the 0-back task. From the EEG event-related potentials as well
as time-frequency plots were computed. The ERPs showed a general delay of the
frontocentral N2, and an attenuation and delay of both the P3a and P3b in older
versus younger adults. Importantly, the frontal P3a was reduced in older adults
in the 2-back task. Time-frequency decomposition revealed consistently lower
power in frontal theta (6 Hz) and parietal alpha (9-11 Hz) frequency
range in older versus younger adults whereas no age-related differences were
found in the delta frequency range. Task unspecific reduction of posterior alpha
in elderly was paralleled by a reduction of the P3b. In contrast, the older
adults had a strongly reduced frontal theta power in the 2-back task, which
parallels the P3a reduction in the ERPs. The widespread reduction of alpha may
indicate that older adults needed to recruit more attentional resources for
successful task performance, whereas reduced frontal theta may indicate that
older adults are less able to recruit frontal resources related to top-down
control with increasing task demands. This suggests a less efficient
fronto-parietal network synchronicity in older individuals that leads to
deficits in identification and maintenance of task relevant stimuli. |
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ISSN: | 0269-8803 2151-2124 |
DOI: | 10.1027/0269-8803/a000123 |