Title of article
Does cerebral activity change in middle-aged adults in a visual discrimination task?
Author/Authors
Anne-Marie Ferrandez، نويسنده , , Viviane Pouthas، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
13
From page
645
To page
657
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess changes in cerebral activity in middle-aged adults (MA: 50 years) compared to young adults (YA: 20 years). Subjects had to compare the duration or the intensity of a visual stimulus with a previously memorized standard. Evoked potentials were recorded, and a dipole model (obtained from PET data on young adults) was applied for fitting late-latency components. MA performance was poorer than YA performance. Task-specific ERP late components were found (P3 in intensity, CNV in duration), but P3 had a lower amplitude and CNV was less frontal in MAs compared to YAs. The activity of the dipoles that generate late components - cuneus in the intensity task, right frontal in the duration task, and anterior cingulate in both tasks–was less ample or less peaked in MAs than in YAs. This study characterizes neurobiological effects of aging that may already be visible during midlife.
Keywords
aging , Time perception , Evoked potentials , P300 , Contingent Negative Variation , Prefrontal cortex , gyrus cinguli , middle age
Journal title
Neurobiology of Aging
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Neurobiology of Aging
Record number
820072
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