• Title of article

    Compensation or inhibitory failure? Testing hypotheses of age-related right frontal lobe involvement in verbal memory ability using structural and diffusion MRI

  • Author/Authors

    Cox، نويسنده , , Simon R. and Bastin، نويسنده , , Mark E. and Ferguson، نويسنده , , Karen J. and Allerhand، نويسنده , , Mike and Royle، نويسنده , , Natalie A. and Maniega، نويسنده , , Susanna Muٌoz and Starr، نويسنده , , John M. and MacLullich، نويسنده , , Alasdair M.J. and Wardlaw، نويسنده , , Joanna M. and Deary، نويسنده , , Ian J. and MacPherson، نويسنده , , Sarah E.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    4
  • To page
    15
  • Abstract
    Functional neuroimaging studies report increased right prefrontal cortex (PFC) involvement during verbal memory tasks amongst low-scoring older individuals, compared to younger controls and their higher-scoring contemporaries. Some propose that this reflects inefficient use of neural resources through failure of the left PFC to inhibit non-task-related right PFC activity, via the anterior corpus callosum (CC). For others, it indicates partial compensation – that is, the right PFC cannot completely supplement the failing neural network, but contributes positively to performance. We propose that combining structural and diffusion brain MRI can be used to test predictions from these theories which have arisen from fMRI studies. We test these hypotheses in immediate and delayed verbal memory ability amongst 90 healthy older adults of mean age 73 years. Right hippocampus and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) volumes, and fractional anisotropy (FA) in the splenium made unique contributions to verbal memory ability in the whole group. There was no significant effect of anterior callosal white matter integrity on performance. Rather, segmented linear regression indicated that right DLPFC volume was a significantly stronger positive predictor of verbal memory for lower-scorers than higher-scorers, supporting a compensatory explanation for the differential involvement of the right frontal lobe in verbal memory tasks in older age.
  • Keywords
    cognitive ageing , Verbal memory , compensation , MRI , frontal lobe , corpus callosum
  • Journal title
    Cortex
  • Serial Year
    2015
  • Journal title
    Cortex
  • Record number

    2302058