Movement Control and Neuroplasticity Research Group, Department of Movement Sciences, Group Biomedical Sciences, KU Leuven, Leuven 3000, Belgium.
KU Leuven Brain Institute, Leuven 3000, Belgium.
J Neurosci. 2021 Jan 13;41(2):331-341. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1709-20.2020. Epub 2020 Nov 19.
In complex everyday environments, action selection is critical for optimal goal-directed behavior. This refers to the process of choosing a proper action from the range of possible alternatives. The neural mechanisms underlying action selection and how these are affected by normal aging remain to be elucidated. In the present cross-sectional study, we studied processes of effector selection during a multilimb reaction time task in a lifespan sample of healthy human adults ( = 89; 20-75 years; 48 males, 41 females). Participants were instructed to react as quickly and accurately as possible to visually cued stimuli representing single-limb or combined upper and/or lower limb motions. Diffusion MRI was used to study structural connectivity between prefrontal and striatal regions as critical nodes for action selection. Behavioral findings revealed that increasing age was associated with slowing of action selection performance. At the neural level, aging had a negative impact on prefronto-striatal connectivity. Importantly, mediation analyses revealed that the negative association between action selection performance and age was mediated by prefronto-striatal connectivity, specifically the connections between left rostral medial frontal gyrus and left nucleus accumbens as well as right frontal pole and left caudate. These results highlight the potential role of prefronto-striatal white matter decline in poorer action selection performance of older adults. As a result of enhanced life expectancy, researchers have devoted increasing attention to the study of age-related alterations in cognitive and motor functions. Here we study associations between brain structure and behavior to reveal the impact of central neural white matter changes as a function of normal aging on action selection performance. We demonstrate the critical role of a reduction in prefronto-striatal structural connectivity in accounting for action selection performance deficits in healthy older adults. Preserving this cortico-subcortical pathway may be critical for behavioral flexibility and functional independence in older age.
在复杂的日常环境中,动作选择对于最优的目标导向行为至关重要。这是指从可能的替代方案中选择适当动作的过程。动作选择的神经机制以及正常衰老如何影响这些机制仍有待阐明。在本横断面研究中,我们研究了健康人类成年人(n = 89;20-75 岁;48 名男性,41 名女性)在一生中样本中进行多肢体反应时间任务期间的效应器选择过程。参与者被指示尽可能快速准确地对视觉提示的代表单肢体或组合上下肢体运动的刺激做出反应。扩散 MRI 用于研究前额叶和纹状体区域之间的结构连接,这些区域是动作选择的关键节点。行为研究结果表明,年龄的增长与动作选择性能的减慢有关。在神经水平上,衰老对前额纹状体连接产生负面影响。重要的是,中介分析表明,动作选择性能与年龄之间的负相关关系是由前额纹状体连接介导的,特别是左侧额内侧回与左侧伏隔核以及右侧额极与左侧尾状核之间的连接。这些结果突出了前额纹状体白质下降在老年人较差的动作选择性能中的潜在作用。由于预期寿命的延长,研究人员越来越关注认知和运动功能的年龄相关变化的研究。在这里,我们研究大脑结构和行为之间的关联,以揭示作为正常衰老的中央神经白质变化对动作选择性能的影响。我们证明了前额纹状体结构连接减少在解释健康老年人动作选择性能缺陷方面的关键作用。保留这条皮质下通路可能对老年人的行为灵活性和功能独立性至关重要。