Publication | Open Access
Age-Related Differences in Neural Activity during Memory Encoding and Retrieval: A Positron Emission Tomography Study
821
Citations
38
References
1997
Year
Memory RetrievalNeuropsychologyMemory EncodingBrain FunctionNeurolinguisticsNeural ActivityHuman MemoryShort-term MemorySocial SciencesPositron Emission TomographyMemoryNeurologyCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceMemory SystemBrain StructureAge-related DifferencesNeuroimagingCerebral Blood FlowBrain ImagingMemory LossDementiaNeuroscienceFrontal ActivationMedicineFrontal Activity
PET measured regional cerebral blood flow in young and old participants during encoding, recognition, and recall, and multivariate partial‑least‑squares analysis identified age‑related neural differences between encoding/retrieval and recognition/recall. Young adults showed greater left prefrontal and occipito‑temporal activation during encoding and right prefrontal/parietal activation during retrieval, whereas older adults exhibited increased insular activity during encoding, cuneus/precuneus activity during recognition, and left prefrontal activity during recall, reflecting age‑related decreases in efficiency and compensatory increases in neural engagement.
Positron emission tomography (PET) was used to compare regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in young (mean 26 years) and old (mean 70 years) subjects while they were encoding, recognizing, and recalling word pairs. A multivariate partial-least-squares (PLS) analysis of the data was used to identify age-related neural changes associated with (1) encoding versus retrieval and (2) recognition versus recall. Young subjects showed higher activation than old subjects (1) in left prefrontal and occipito-temporal regions during encoding and (2) in right prefrontal and parietal regions during retrieval. Old subjects showed relatively higher activation than young subjects in several regions, including insular regions during encoding, cuneus/precuneus regions during recognition, and left prefrontal regions during recall. Frontal activity in young subjects was left-lateralized during encoding and right-lateralized during recall [hemispheric encoding/retrieval asymmetry (HERA)], whereas old adults showed little frontal activity during encoding and a more bilateral pattern of frontal activation during retrieval. In young subjects, activation in recall was higher than that in recognition in cerebellar and cingulate regions, whereas recognition showed higher activity in right temporal and parietal regions. In old subjects, the differences in blood flow between recall and recognition were smaller in these regions, yet more pronounced in other regions. Taken together, the results indicate that advanced age is associated with neural changes in the brain systems underlying encoding, recognition, and recall. These changes take two forms: (1) age-related decreases in local regional activity, which may signal less efficient processing by the old, and (2) age-related increases in activity, which may signal functional compensation.
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