Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA; Brigham and Women's Hospital, Division of Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA; Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA.
Neuroimage. 2018 May 1;171:296-310. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.12.053. Epub 2017 Dec 20.
The neural circuitry mediating the influence of motivation on long-term declarative or episodic memory formation is delineated in young adults, but its status is unknown in healthy aging. We examined the effect of reward and punishment anticipation on intentional declarative memory formation for words using an event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) monetary incentive encoding task in twenty-one younger and nineteen older adults. At 24-hour memory retrieval testing, younger adults were significantly more likely to remember words associated with motivational cues than neutral cues. Motivational enhancement of memory in younger adults occurred only for recollection ("remember" responses) and not for familiarity ("familiar" responses). Older adults had overall diminished memory and did not show memory gains in association with motivational cues. Memory encoding associated with monetary rewards or punishments activated motivational (substantia nigra/ventral tegmental area) and memory-related (hippocampus) brain regions in younger, but not older, adults during the target word periods. In contrast, older and younger adults showed similar activation of these brain regions during the anticipatory motivational cue interval. In a separate monetary incentive delay task that did not require learning, we found evidence for relatively preserved striatal reward anticipation in older adults. This supports a potential dissociation between incidental and intentional motivational processes in healthy aging. The finding that motivation to obtain rewards and avoid punishments had reduced behavioral and neural influence on intentional episodic memory formation in older compared to younger adults is relevant to life-span theories of cognitive aging including the dopaminergic vulnerability hypothesis.
激励对长期陈述性或情景记忆形成影响的神经回路在年轻成年人中已被描绘出来,但在健康衰老中其状态尚不清楚。我们使用事件相关功能磁共振成像 (fMRI) 货币奖励编码任务,在 21 名年轻成年人和 19 名老年成年人中检查了奖励和惩罚预期对单词的有意陈述性记忆形成的影响。在 24 小时记忆检索测试中,年轻成年人更有可能记住与激励线索相关的单词,而不是中性线索。在年轻成年人中,动机对记忆的增强仅发生在回忆(“记得”反应),而不是熟悉(“熟悉”反应)。老年成年人的整体记忆能力下降,并且与激励线索没有记忆增益。在目标单词期间,与金钱奖励或惩罚相关的记忆编码会在年轻成年人中激活动机(黑质/腹侧被盖区)和记忆相关(海马体)脑区,但不会在老年成年人中激活这些脑区。相比之下,在不需要学习的单独的货币奖励延迟任务中,我们发现老年成年人的纹状体奖励预期相对保留的证据。这支持了健康衰老中偶然和有意动机过程之间的潜在分离。与认知老化的全生命周期理论相关的是,与年轻成年人相比,奖励和避免惩罚的动机对老年成年人的有意情景记忆形成的行为和神经影响降低,这一发现与多巴胺脆弱性假说有关。