Abstract

The hippocampus plays a prominent role in associative memory by supporting relational binding and recollection processes. Structural atrophy in the hippocampus is likely to induce associative memory deficits in older adults. Previous studies have primarily focused on average age-related differences in hippocampal structure and memory performance. To date, however, it remains unclear whether individual differences in hippocampal morphometry underlie differential associative memory performance, and whether there are sex differences in the structural correlates of associative memory in healthy older adults. Here, we used voxel-based morphometry (VBM) to examine the extent to which gray matter volume (GMV) of the hippocampus predicts associative memory performance in cognitively normal older adults. Seventy-one participants completed a cued recall paired-associative learning test (PALT), which consists of novel associations and semantically related associations, and underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We observed worse associative memory performance and larger variability for novel associations than for semantically related associations. The VBM results revealed that higher scores on associative memory for novel associations were related to greater hippocampal GMV across all older adults. When considering men and women separately, the correlation between hippocampal GMV and associative memory performance for novel associations reached significance only in older women. These findings suggest that hippocampal structural volumes may predict individual differences in novel associative memory in older women but not men.

Highlights

  • Episodic memory refers to the memory of personally experienced events that occurred at a particular time and place (Tulving, 1985)

  • There were no significant correlations between the region of interest (ROI) gray matter volume (GMV) and paired-associative learning test (PALT) scores on semantically related associations regardless of whether the analyses were performed across all older adults or separately for men and women

  • The results revealed no significant correlations between the GMV of the left hippocampus and performance on digit span forward (DSF) (r(48) = 0.071, p = 0.624), digit span backward (DSB) (r(48) = 0.204, p = 0.155), VFT (r(48) = −0.107, p = 0.460), or TMT (r(48) = −0.144, p = 0.317) at a Bonferroni correction threshold of 0.0125 (0.05/4)

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Summary

Introduction

Episodic memory refers to the memory of personally experienced events that occurred at a particular time and place (Tulving, 1985). Normal aging is associated with a decline in episodic memory. The associative deficits hypothesis (ADH) attributes age-related episodic memory decline to difficulties in creating and retrieving associations between single units of. Sex Differences in Associative Memory information in older adults (Naveh-Benjamin, 2000). As a typical form of episodic memory, associative memory involves the ability to remember inter-item and item-context relationships. Many previous studies have indicated a greater decline in associative memory than item memory in normal aging. This is observed with a wide range of subjects, such as word pairs, picture pairs and face-name pairs (see Old and Naveh-Benjamin, 2008 for a meta-analysis)

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