Ramanoël Stephen, Durteste Marion, Bécu Marcia, Habas Christophe, Arleo Angelo
Sorbonne Université, INSERM, CNRS, Institut de la Vision, Paris, France.
Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2020 Oct 29;14:552111. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2020.552111. eCollection 2020.
Older adults have difficulties in navigating unfamiliar environments and updating their wayfinding behavior when faced with blocked routes. This decline in navigational capabilities has traditionally been ascribed to memory impairments and dysexecutive function, whereas the impact of visual aging has often been overlooked. The ability to perceive visuospatial information such as salient landmarks is essential to navigating efficiently. To date, the functional and neurobiological factors underpinning landmark processing in aging remain insufficiently characterized. To address this issue, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to investigate the brain activity associated with landmark-based navigation in young and healthy older participants. The performances of 25 young adults (μ = 25.4 years, = 2.7; seven females) and 17 older adults (μ = 73.0 years, = 3.9; 10 females) were assessed in a virtual-navigation task in which they had to orient using salient landmarks. The underlying whole-brain patterns of activity as well as the functional roles of specific cerebral regions involved in landmark processing, namely the parahippocampal place area (PPA), the occipital place area (OPA), and the retrosplenial cortex (RSC), were analyzed. Older adults' navigational abilities were overall diminished compared to young adults. Also, the two age groups relied on distinct navigational strategies to solve the task. Better performances during landmark-based navigation were associated with increased neural activity in an extended neural network comprising several cortical and cerebellar regions. Direct comparisons between age groups revealed that young participants had greater anterior temporal activity. Also, only young adults showed significant activity in occipital areas corresponding to the cortical projection of the central visual field during landmark-based navigation. The region-of-interest analysis revealed an increased OPA activation in older adult participants during the landmark condition. There were no significant between-group differences in PPA and RSC activations. These preliminary results hint at the possibility that aging diminishes fine-grained information processing in occipital and temporal regions, thus hindering the capacity to use landmarks adequately for navigation. Keeping sight of its exploratory nature, this work helps towards a better comprehension of the neural dynamics subtending landmark-based navigation and it provides new insights on the impact of age-related visuospatial processing differences on navigation capabilities.
老年人在陌生环境中导航以及在面对路线受阻时更新其寻路行为存在困难。传统上,这种导航能力的下降归因于记忆障碍和执行功能障碍,而视觉衰老的影响常常被忽视。感知诸如显著地标等视觉空间信息的能力对于高效导航至关重要。迄今为止,衰老过程中支持地标处理的功能和神经生物学因素仍未得到充分表征。为了解决这个问题,功能磁共振成像(fMRI)被用于研究年轻和健康的老年参与者中与基于地标的导航相关的大脑活动。在一项虚拟导航任务中评估了25名年轻成年人(平均年龄μ = 25.4岁,标准差 = 2.7;7名女性)和17名老年人(平均年龄μ = 73.0岁,标准差 = 3.9;10名女性)的表现,在该任务中他们必须使用显著地标进行定向。分析了潜在的全脑活动模式以及参与地标处理的特定脑区的功能作用,即海马旁回位置区(PPA)、枕叶位置区(OPA)和压后皮质(RSC)。与年轻成年人相比,老年人的导航能力总体上有所下降。此外,两个年龄组依靠不同的导航策略来完成任务。基于地标导航期间更好的表现与包括几个皮质和小脑区域的扩展神经网络中神经活动的增加有关。年龄组之间的直接比较显示,年轻参与者的颞叶前部活动更强。此外,只有年轻成年人在基于地标导航期间在与中央视野皮质投射相对应的枕叶区域表现出显著活动。感兴趣区域分析显示,在地标条件下老年参与者的OPA激活增加。PPA和RSC激活在组间没有显著差异。这些初步结果暗示,衰老可能会减少枕叶和颞叶区域的细粒度信息处理,从而阻碍充分利用地标进行导航的能力。考虑到这项研究的探索性质,这项工作有助于更好地理解基于地标的导航背后的神经动力学,并为与年龄相关的视觉空间处理差异对导航能力的影响提供新的见解。