Abstract

Advancing age affects both cognitive performance and functional brain activity and interpretation of these effects has led to a variety of conceptual research models without always explicitly linking the two effects. However, to best understand the multifaceted effects of advancing age, age differences in functional brain activity need to be explicitly tied to the cognitive task performance. This work hypothesized that age-related differences in task performance are partially explained by age-related differences in functional brain activity and formally tested these causal relationships. Functional MRI data was from groups of young and old adults engaged in an executive task-switching experiment. Analyses were voxel-wise testing of moderated-mediation and simple mediation statistical path models to determine whether age group, brain activity and their interaction explained task performance in regions demonstrating an effect of age group. Results identified brain regions whose age-related differences in functional brain activity significantly explained age-related differences in task performance. In all identified locations, significant moderated-mediation relationships resulted from increasing brain activity predicting worse (slower) task performance in older but not younger adults. Findings suggest that advancing age links task performance to the level of brain activity. The overall message of this work is that in order to understand the role of functional brain activity on cognitive performance, analysis methods should respect theoretical relationships. Namely, that age affects brain activity and brain activity is related to task performance.

Highlights

  • Age has a multifaceted effect on cognitive performance and neural activity

  • Findings suggest that advancing age links task performance to the level of brain activity

  • Moderated-mediation Without exception, significant moderated-mediation effects of age group on performance via brain activity was driven by the older age group via significant relationships between increasing brain activity and decreasing task performance; there was no relationship between increased activation and performance in the young group

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Summary

Introduction

Age has a multifaceted effect on cognitive performance and neural activity. Age-related differences in the neural processes of cognition, investigated with neuroimaging techniques, have led to a variety of explanations and conceptual research models of aging (Cabeza, 2002; Davis et al, 2008; Reuter-Lorenz and Cappell, 2008; Park and Reuter-Lorenz, 2009; Fabiani, 2012). The mechanisms of action of age-related differences in brain activity described in these research models include neural efficiency, capacity and compensation. Efficiency is the rate at which functional brain activity increases to meet increasing cognitive demands. Compensation is functional brain activity in regions not normally utilized to meet cognitive demands. Compensatory functional brain activity is compensating for something This may be a limitation in the functional resources used at lower demands regardless of age, or it may be due to age-related neural changes (Steffener and Stern, 2012). These explanations describe relationships between age-related differences in brain activity as a function cognitive load

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