Aging modulates the impact of cognitive interference subtypes on dynamic connectivity across a distributed motor network

Research has shown age-related declines in cognitive control in the context of interference, but these studies have focused on frontoparietal networks and less is known about impacts on motor response-related dynamics in the face of distractors. Thus, we examined whether healthy aging affected conne...

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Veröffentlicht in:npj aging 2024-11, Vol.10 (1), p.54, Article 54
Hauptverfasser: Son, Jake J., Arif, Yasra, Okelberry, Hannah J., Johnson, Hallie J., Willett, Madelyn P., Wiesman, Alex I., Wilson, Tony W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Research has shown age-related declines in cognitive control in the context of interference, but these studies have focused on frontoparietal networks and less is known about impacts on motor response-related dynamics in the face of distractors. Thus, we examined whether healthy aging affected connectivity between attention networks and motor circuitry using a multisource interference task and magnetoencephalography in 72 healthy-aging participants (28–63 years-old). Our results indicated stronger beta connectivity with increasing age between bilateral primary motor (M1) and occipital cortices, as well as stronger gamma fronto-motor connectivity during flanker-type interference. Regarding Simon-type interference, stronger beta interactions were observed between left M1 and right temporal and right M1 and left parietal with increasing age. Finally, the superadditivity effect (flanker + Simon presented simultaneously) indicated weaker beta connectivity between right M1 and left premotor with increasing age. These findings suggest exhaustion of age-related compensatory adaptations in the fronto-parieto-motor network with greater interference.
ISSN:2731-6068
2731-6068
2056-3973
DOI:10.1038/s41514-024-00182-0