Abstract

Aging is associated with both changes in affective experience and attention. An intrinsic brain network subserving these functions, the salience network, has not shown clear evidence of a corresponding age-related change. We propose a solution to this discrepancy: that aging differentially affects the connectivity of two dissociated subsystems of the salience network identified in our prior research (Touroutoglou et al., 2012). We examined the age-related changes in intrinsic connectivity between a dorsal and a ventral salience subsystem in a sample of 111 participants ranging in age from 18 years to 81 years old. We predicted that connectivity within the ventral subsystem is relatively preserved with age, while connectivity in the dorsal subsystem declines. Our findings showed that the connectivity within the ventral subsystem was not only preserved but it actually increased with age, whereas the connectivity within the dorsal subsystem decreased with age. Furthermore, age-related increase in arousal experience was partially mediated by age-related increases in ventral salience subsystem, whereas age-related decline in executive function was fully mediated by age-related decreases in dorsal salience subsystem connectivity. These findings explain previously conflicting results on age-related changes in the salience network, and suggest a mechanism for relatively preserved affective function in the elderly.

Highlights

  • Substantial evidence indicates that both affect and executive function change as people age, and these changes offer challenges for healthy aging

  • We found that intrinsic connectivity within the ventral salience subsystem was preserved as we predicted but it was increased with age whereas within the dorsal salience subsystem decreased with age

  • The ventral salience subsystem connectivity between the ventral AI (vAI) and amygdala was increased with age (R2 = 0.09, r = 0.30, p = 0.002)

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Summary

Introduction

Substantial evidence indicates that both affect and executive function change as people age, and these changes offer challenges for healthy aging. Understanding the mechanisms of age-related changes in affect and attention may help to identify factors important for healthy aging, as well as shed light on normal brain function throughout the lifespan. Both affective processing and executive function are linked to the brain’s salience network, a group of structures connected at rest including the anterior insula (AI), dorsal anterior and mid-cingulate cortex (ACC/MCC) and amygdala (Seeley et al, 2007; Touroutoglou et al, 2012)

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