| |
RECENT PUBLICATIONS
McEvoy, L.K., Pellouchoud, E., Smith, M.E.,
& Gevins, A. (2001). Neurophysiological signals of working memory
in normal aging. Cognitive Brain Research, 11, 363-376.
ABSTRACT
To examine how neurophysiological signals
of working memory (WM) change with normal aging, we recorded EEGs
from healthy groups (N=10 each) of young (mean age=22 years), middle-aged
(mean=48yrs), and older (mean=69yrs) adults. EEGs were recorded
while subjects performed easy and difficult versions of a spatial
WM task. Groups were matched for IQ (mean =123; WAIS-R) and practiced
in task performance. Responses slowed with age, particularly in
the more difficult task. Advanced age was associated with decreased
amplitude and increased latency of the parietal P300 component of
the event-related potential and an increase in the amplitude of
a frontal P200 component. Spectral features of the EEG also differed
between groups. Younger subjects displayed an increase in the frontal
midline theta rhythm with increased task difficulty, a result not
observed in older subjects. Age-related changes were also observed
in the task-related alpha signal, the amplitude of which decreases
as more neurons become involved in task-related processing. Young
adults showed a decrease in alpha power with increased task difficulty
over parietal regions but not over frontal regions. Middle-aged
and older adults showed decreased alpha power with increased task
difficulty over both frontal and parietal regions. This suggests
that normal aging may be associated with changes in the fronto-parietal
networks involved with spatial WM processes. Younger subjects appear
to use a strategy that relies on parietal areas involved with spatial
processing whereas older subjects appear to use a strategy that
relies more on frontal areas.
Back to Publications
|