Bharani Krishna L, Paller Ken A, Reber Paul J, Weintraub Sandra, Yanar Jorge, Morrison Robert G
a Department of Psychology , Loyola University Chicago , Chicago , IL , USA.
b Department of Psychology , Northwestern University , Evanston , IL , USA.
Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn. 2016;23(3):304-26. doi: 10.1080/13825585.2015.1091438. Epub 2015 Sep 30.
Healthy older adults typically perform worse than younger adults at rule-based category learning, but better than patients with Alzheimer's or Parkinson's disease. To further investigate aging's effect on rule-based category learning, we monitored event-related potentials (ERPs) while younger and neuropsychologically typical older adults performed a visual category-learning task with a rule-based category structure and trial-by-trial feedback. Using these procedures, we previously identified ERPs sensitive to categorization strategy and accuracy in young participants. In addition, previous studies have demonstrated the importance of neural processing in the prefrontal cortex and the medial temporal lobe for this task. In this study, older adults showed lower accuracy and longer response times than younger adults, but there were two distinct subgroups of older adults. One subgroup showed near-chance performance throughout the procedure, never categorizing accurately. The other subgroup reached asymptotic accuracy that was equivalent to that in younger adults, although they categorized more slowly. These two subgroups were further distinguished via ERPs. Consistent with the compensation theory of cognitive aging, older adults who successfully learned showed larger frontal ERPs when compared with younger adults. Recruitment of prefrontal resources may have improved performance while slowing response times. Additionally, correlations of feedback-locked P300 amplitudes with category-learning accuracy differentiated successful younger and older adults. Overall, the results suggest that the ability to adapt one's behavior in response to feedback during learning varies across older individuals, and that the failure of some to adapt their behavior may reflect inadequate engagement of prefrontal cortex.
健康的老年人在基于规则的类别学习方面通常比年轻人表现更差,但比患有阿尔茨海默病或帕金森病的患者表现更好。为了进一步研究衰老对基于规则的类别学习的影响,我们监测了事件相关电位(ERP),同时让年轻人和神经心理学上正常的老年人执行一项具有基于规则的类别结构和逐次试验反馈的视觉类别学习任务。使用这些程序,我们之前已经确定了对年轻参与者的分类策略和准确性敏感的ERP。此外,先前的研究已经证明前额叶皮层和内侧颞叶的神经处理对于这项任务的重要性。在这项研究中,老年人比年轻人表现出更低的准确性和更长的反应时间,但老年人中有两个不同的亚组。一个亚组在整个过程中表现接近随机,从未准确分类。另一个亚组达到了与年轻人相当的渐近准确性,尽管他们分类较慢。这两个亚组通过ERP进一步区分。与认知衰老的补偿理论一致,成功学习的老年人与年轻人相比,额叶ERP更大。前额叶资源的募集可能在减慢反应时间的同时提高了表现。此外,反馈锁定的P300振幅与类别学习准确性的相关性区分了成功的年轻人和老年人。总体而言,结果表明,老年人在学习过程中根据反馈调整行为的能力各不相同,一些人无法调整行为可能反映出前额叶皮层参与不足。