Cappelletti Marinella, Pikkat Helen, Upstill Emily, Speekenbrink Maarten, Walsh Vincent
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Department of Psychology, Goldsmiths College, University of London, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and.
J Neurosci. 2015 Feb 4;35(5):2213-25. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1018-14.2015.
Cognitive training aiming at improving learning is often successful, but what exactly underlies the observed improvements and how these differ across the age spectrum are currently unknown. Here we asked whether learning in young and older people may reflect enhanced ability to integrate information required to perform a cognitive task or whether it may instead reflect the ability to inhibit task-irrelevant information for successful task performance. We trained 30 young and 30 aging human participants on a numerosity discrimination task known to engage the parietal cortex and in which cue-integration and inhibitory abilities can be distinguished. We coupled training with parietal, motor, or sham transcranial random noise stimulation, known for modulating neural activity. Numerosity discrimination improved after training and was maintained long term, especially in the training + parietal stimulation group, regardless of age. Despite the quantitatively similar improvement in the two age groups, the content of learning differed remarkably: aging participants improved more in inhibitory abilities, whereas younger subjects improved in cue-integration abilities. Moreover, differences in the content of learning were reflected in different transfer effects to untrained but related abilities: in the younger group, improvements in cue integration paralleled improvements in continuous quantity (time and space), whereas in the elderly group, improvements in numerosity-based inhibitory abilities generalized to other measures of inhibition and corresponded to a decline in space discrimination, possibly because conflicting learning resources are used in numerosity and continuous quantity processing. These results indicate that training can enhance different, age-dependent cognitive processes and highlight the importance of identifying the exact processes underlying learning for effective training programs.
旨在提高学习能力的认知训练通常是成功的,但目前尚不清楚观察到的改善究竟基于什么,以及这些改善在不同年龄段之间有何差异。在这里,我们探讨了年轻人和老年人的学习是否可能反映出整合执行认知任务所需信息的能力增强,或者是否可能反映出抑制与任务无关信息以成功完成任务的能力。我们让30名年轻的和30名年长的人类参与者接受一项已知会激活顶叶皮层的数字辨别任务训练,在该任务中可以区分线索整合能力和抑制能力。我们将训练与顶叶、运动或假经颅随机噪声刺激相结合,已知这些刺激可调节神经活动。无论年龄大小,训练后数字辨别能力均有所提高,并能长期保持,尤其是在训练 + 顶叶刺激组。尽管两个年龄组在数量上的改善相似,但学习的内容却有显著差异:年长参与者在抑制能力方面提高得更多,而年轻受试者在线索整合能力方面有所提高。此外,学习内容的差异反映在对未训练但相关能力的不同迁移效应上:在较年轻的组中,线索整合能力的提高与连续量(时间和空间)的改善平行,而在老年组中,基于数字的抑制能力的提高推广到其他抑制测量指标,并对应于空间辨别能力的下降,这可能是因为在数字和连续量处理中使用了相互冲突的学习资源。这些结果表明,训练可以增强不同的、与年龄相关的认知过程,并突出了确定学习背后的确切过程对有效训练计划的重要性。