The effect of ageing on the neural substrates of incidental encoding leading to recollection or familiarity

被引:4
|
作者
Francois, Sarah [1 ,2 ]
Angel, Lucie [3 ]
Salmon, Eric [1 ,2 ]
Bastin, Christine [1 ,2 ]
Collette, Fabienne [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Liege, GIGA Cyclotron Res Ctr Vivo Imaging, Allee 6 Aout 8,Bat B30, B-4000 Liege, Belgium
[2] Univ Liege, Psychol & Cognit Neurosci Unit, Liege, Belgium
[3] Univ Tours, CeRCA, CNRS, UMR 7295, Tours, France
关键词
Aging; Episodic memory encoding; Recollection; Familiarity; fMRI; MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT; SUBSEQUENT-MEMORY; OLDER-ADULTS; RECOGNITION MEMORY; BRAIN ACTIVITY; ASSOCIATIVE MEMORY; DIVIDED ATTENTION; NAME AGREEMENT; LIFE-SPAN; AGE;
D O I
10.1016/j.bandc.2018.07.004
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
It is well-known that the ageing process disrupts episodic memory. The aim of this study was to use an fMRI visual recognition task to characterize age-related changes in cerebral regions activated, during encoding, for images that would subsequently lead to a recollection-based or to a familiarity-based recognition. Results show that, for subsequent recollection, young adults activated regions related to semantic processing more extensively than older ones. On the other hand, despite putatively producing less semantic elaboration, older adults activated contralateral regions supplementary to those found in young adults (which might represent attempted compensation), as well as regions of the default-mode network. These results suggest older adults could achieve subsequent recollection through different processes, for instance an appraisal of the self-relevance of the stimuli. For subsequent familiarity, the comparisons only revealed greater activations in young adults, in the dorsal frontoparietal attention system as well as in the hippocampus, again suggesting that, even if older adults are able to produce recollection- and familiarity-based recognition, the semantic processing might still be weaker in old adults, who might nonetheless use qualitatively different strategies in order to produce such responses. Further studies are necessary in order to characterize those strategies.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 12
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The neural substrates of recollection and familiarity
    Yonelinas, AP
    Kroll, NEA
    Dobbins, IG
    Lazzara, M
    Knight, RT
    BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 1999, 22 (03) : 468 - +
  • [2] Effect of familiarity and recollection during constrained retrieval on incidental encoding for new "foil" information
    Yu, Mingyang
    Cui, Can
    Jiang, Yingjie
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 13
  • [3] NEURAL SUBSTRATES UNDERLYING EFFECTS OF POST-ENCODING STRESS AND EMOTIONAL AROUSAL ON RECOLLECTION AND FAMILIARITY
    McCullough, Andrew
    Ritchey, Maureen
    Yonelinas, Andrew P.
    Ranganath, Charan
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2013, : 169 - 169
  • [4] Differential neural correlates for recollection and familiarity during memory encoding
    Ranganath, C
    Duarte, AL
    Cohen, MX
    Dy, CJ
    Yonelinas, AP
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2003, 40 : S14 - S15
  • [5] Effects of modality on the neural correlates of encoding processes supporting recollection and familiarity
    Gottlieb, Lauren J.
    Rugg, Michael D.
    LEARNING & MEMORY, 2011, 18 (09) : 565 - 573
  • [6] Dissociable neural correlates for familiarity and recollection during the encoding and retrieval of pictures
    Duarte, A
    Ranganath, C
    Winward, L
    Hayward, D
    Knight, RT
    COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH, 2004, 18 (03): : 255 - 272
  • [7] Effect of post-encoding emotion on recollection and familiarity for pictures
    Wang, Bo
    Ren, Yanju
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 70 (07): : 1236 - 1253
  • [8] ROC in animals: Uncovering the neural substrates of recollection and familiarity in episodic recognition memory
    Sauvage, Magdalena M.
    CONSCIOUSNESS AND COGNITION, 2010, 19 (03) : 816 - 828
  • [9] Electrophysiological dissociation of the neural correlates of recollection and familiarity
    Woodruff, C. Chad
    Hayama, Hiroki R.
    Rugg, Michael D.
    BRAIN RESEARCH, 2006, 1100 : 125 - 135
  • [10] The Neural Correlates of Recollection and Familiarity During Aging
    Angel, L.
    Bastin, C.
    Genon, S.
    Salmon, E.
    Collette, F.
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2013, 27 : 48 - 48