TY - JOUR
T1 - Dedifferentiation in the visual cortex
T2 - An fMRI investigation of individual differences in older adults
AU - Voss, Michelle W.
AU - Erickson, Kirk I.
AU - Chaddock, Laura
AU - Prakash, Ruchika S.
AU - Colcombe, Stanley J.
AU - Morris, Katherine S.
AU - Doerksen, Shawna
AU - Hu, Liang
AU - McAuley, Edward
AU - Kramer, Arthur F.
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank Nancy Dodge, Holly Tracy, Edward Malkowski, Jennifer Kim, and Maritza Alvarado, and EPL laboratory for their help in data collection. We would also like to thank the National Institute on Aging (RO1 AG25667 and RO1 AG25032) and the Institute for the Study of Aging for their support of our research. Finally, we would like to thank reviewers for their helpful comments and suggestions on previous versions of the manuscript.
PY - 2008/12/9
Y1 - 2008/12/9
N2 - Dedifferentiation, or decreased processing specificity, has been suggested to represent a ubiquitous characteristic of cognitive aging. In this study, we examined both age-related differences and intra-group differences in neural specificity in the ventral visual cortex for color, words, faces and places. Our results demonstrated that neural dedifferentiation was not ubiquitous across stimulus categories. Neural dedifferentiation was also relatively stable, across age, in a group of older adults. Older adults with more overall gray matter showed less neural dedifferentiation in the visual cortex. However, regional gray matter volume was not associated with neural dedifferentiation. We illustrate these effects using a discriminability metric, a signal detection theory measure, for neural dedifferentiation that takes into account both magnitude and variance of brain activation. The dedifferentiation measure provides a quantitative means to examine activation patterns and individual difference factors associated with neural dedifferentiation, and to test theories of behavioral dedifferentiation in cognitive aging literature.
AB - Dedifferentiation, or decreased processing specificity, has been suggested to represent a ubiquitous characteristic of cognitive aging. In this study, we examined both age-related differences and intra-group differences in neural specificity in the ventral visual cortex for color, words, faces and places. Our results demonstrated that neural dedifferentiation was not ubiquitous across stimulus categories. Neural dedifferentiation was also relatively stable, across age, in a group of older adults. Older adults with more overall gray matter showed less neural dedifferentiation in the visual cortex. However, regional gray matter volume was not associated with neural dedifferentiation. We illustrate these effects using a discriminability metric, a signal detection theory measure, for neural dedifferentiation that takes into account both magnitude and variance of brain activation. The dedifferentiation measure provides a quantitative means to examine activation patterns and individual difference factors associated with neural dedifferentiation, and to test theories of behavioral dedifferentiation in cognitive aging literature.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.brainres.2008.09.051
DO - 10.1016/j.brainres.2008.09.051
M3 - Article
C2 - 18848823
AN - SCOPUS:56049087034
SN - 0006-8993
VL - 1244
SP - 121
EP - 131
JO - Brain research
JF - Brain research
ER -