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Qu PASA The PosteriorAnterior Shift in Aging

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Title: Qu PASA The PosteriorAnterior Shift in Aging


1
Qué PASA? The Posterior-Anterior Shift in Aging
  • Simon W. Davis, Nancy A. Dennis, Sander M.
    Daselaar, Mathias S. Fleck, Roberto Cabeza
  • Cerebral Cortex, doi10.1093/cercor/bhm155

2
Background
  • PASA (posterior-anterior shift in aging)
  • an age-related reduction in occipital activity
    coupled with increased frontal activity (Grady,
    1994)
  • PASA pattern has found in attention, visual
    perception, visuospatial processing, working
    memory, episodic memory encoding retrieval

3
Unfinished issues of PASA
  • Validity of PASA
  • It may simply reflect difference in task
    difficulty (ic. objective subject measures of
    difficulty), especially in its prefrontal cortex
    (PFC) component.
  • Function of PASA
  • No study has found PFC activations in older
    adults positively associated with performance and
    negatively associated with occipital activation

4
Unfinished issues of PASA-Cont.
  • Generalizability of PASA
  • PASA effect has been observed for activation,
    but not for deactivation
  • ?Past findings showed attenuated deactivations in
    posterior midline cortex in healthy older adults.
  • possibility compensating this deficit by
    deactivating anterior midline regions to a
    greater extent than younger adults?

5
Back to the current study
  • 3 predictions
  • 1. PASA will exist even eliminating differences
    in difficulty (the validity of PASA)
  • 2. PFC activity will be positively correlated
    with cognitive performance and negatively
    correlated with occipital activity, supporting
    the compensation account (the function of PASA)
  • 3. Older adults would show weaker deactivations
    in posterior midline regions but stronger
    deactivations in anterior medial regions (the
    generalizability of PASA)

6
Methods
  • Participants 12 younger 12 older adults were
    matched by a rank order based on corrected scores
    of ER and VP performance

7
Methods-cont.
  • Stimuli
  • For the episodic retrieval (ER) task
  • 240 five-letter words 80 five-letter
    pseudowords
  • For the visual perception (VP) task
  • 120 rectangles were divided by a jagged line to
    2 areas, making different versions of a
    perceptual stimuli with different difficulty of
    subject performance

8
Methods-cont.
  • Behavioral paradigm
  • Prior to scanning
  • Showing intermixed real words and pseudowords
  • During scanning
  • 4 runs of the ER 2 runs of the VP task were
    performed
  • accuracy confidence were rated

9
Methods-cont.
  • MRI scanning
  • 4-T GE scanner was used.
  • The anatomical MRI was acquired using a 3D T1-
    weighted echo-planar sequence.
  • fMRI analyses
  • Event-related blood oxygen level-dependent
    responses for each participant were analyzed
    using a modified general linear model

10
Results
  • Behavioral data

11
Results-cont.
  • Neuroimaging results

12
Results-cont.
  • Neuroimaging results show PASA was found when
    differences in task difficulty were eliminated

13
Results-cont.
  • Neuroimaging results show in older adults PFC
    activity was negatively correlated with activity
    in the occipital cortex, but positively
    correlated with ER/VP performance in younger
    adults, no significant correlations between
    regions or between activity and performance

14
Results-cont.
  • Neuroimaging results indicated PASA was also
    found for deactivation

15
Discussion
  • Validity of PASA against a difficulty account
  • After removing difficulty difference, a clear
    PASA pattern was found-
  • occipital activity in younger gt in older
    adults
  • PFC activity in older gt in younger adults

16
Discussion-cont.
  • Function of PASA for the compensation account
  • PFC activity compensates for the decrease in
    occipital activity that is necessary for
    successful task performance

17
Discussion-cont.
  • Generalizability of PASA posterior-anterior
    shift in deactivations
  • Default network- previous studies indicated
  • 1. posterior and anterior midline cortices are
    often deactivated during task compared with a
    resting baseline.
  • 2. reallocating processing of resources to
    regions involving in task performance
  • ? This present study showed only deactivation
    in posterior midline regions were reduced, but
    enhanced in anterior midline regions by aging.

18
Conclusion
  • PASA pattern acts in a compensatory manner of
    offset posterior-related neuroanatomical declines
    due to aging and is generalizable to
    deactivations across both task and difficulty.

19
Q How could a region (eg. PFC) activate and
deactivate simultaneously (see figure BD)? If
the regions of activation and deactivation are
sort of different, is it proper to conclude more
PFC activation and less occipital deactivation in
older group?
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