Abstract

Elevated prefrontal cortex activity is often observed in healthy older adults despite declines in their memory and other cognitive functions. According to one view, this activity reflects a compensatory functional posterior-to-anterior shift, which contributes to maintenance of cognitive performance when posterior cortical function is impaired. Alternatively, the increased prefrontal activity may be less efficient or less specific because of structural and neurochemical changes accompanying aging. These accounts are difficult to distinguish on the basis of average activity levels within brain regions. Instead, we used a novel, model-based multivariate analysis technique applied to two independent fMRI datasets from an adult-lifespan human sample (N = 123 and N = 115; approximately half female). Standard analysis replicated the age-related increase in average prefrontal activation, but multivariate tests revealed that this activity did not carry additional information. The results contradict the hypothesis of a compensatory posterior-to-anterior shift. Instead, they suggest that the increased prefrontal activation reflects reduced efficiency or specificity rather than compensation.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Functional brain imaging studies have often shown increased activity in prefrontal brain regions in older adults. This has been proposed to reflect a compensatory shift to greater reliance on prefrontal cortex (PFC), helping to maintain cognitive function. Alternatively, activity may become less specific as people age. This is a key question in the neuroscience of aging. In this study, we used novel tests of how different brain regions contribute to long- and short-term memory. We found increased activity in PFC in older adults, but this activity carried less information about memory outcomes than activity in visual regions. These findings are relevant for understanding why cognitive abilities decline with age, suggesting that optimal function depends on successful brain maintenance rather than compensation.

Highlights

  • It is well established that healthy aging is associated with a decline in cognitive processes such as memory, but mechanistic explanation of this decline is impeded by difficulties in interpreting the underlying brain changes. fMRI of such cognitive processes shows striking increases, as well as decreases, in brain activity

  • This study investigated the proposal that there is a posterior-toanterior shift in task-related brain activity during aging, with the greater reliance on prefrontal cortex (PFC) in older age reflecting compensatory mechanisms

  • We tested the predictions of this PASA theory with data from two memory tasks that were conducted on independent and relatively large population-derived adult lifespan samples

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Summary

Introduction

It is well established that healthy aging is associated with a decline in cognitive processes such as memory, but mechanistic explanation of this decline is impeded by difficulties in interpreting the underlying brain changes. fMRI of such cognitive processes shows striking increases, as well as decreases, in brain activityReceived June 20, 2017; revised March 15, 2018; accepted March 21, 2018. It is well established that healthy aging is associated with a decline in cognitive processes such as memory, but mechanistic explanation of this decline is impeded by difficulties in interpreting the underlying brain changes. A.M.M. is a member of the University of Edinburgh Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology (CCACE), part of the UK cross-council Lifelong Health and Wellbeing Initiative, which is supported by Grant G0700704/84698. The Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (Cam-CAN) research is supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (Grant BB/H008217/1). We thank Daniel Mitchell for providing univariate models for Experiment 2

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