Yordanova Juliana, Gajewski Patrick D, Getzmann Stephan, Kirov Roumen, Falkenstein Michael, Kolev Vasil
Institute of Neurobiology, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria.
Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors, Dortmund, Germany.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2021 Sep 30;13:682499. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.682499. eCollection 2021.
Multi-tasking is usually impaired in older people. In multi-tasking, a fixed order of sub-tasks can improve performance by promoting a time-structured preparation of sub-tasks. How proactive control prioritizes the pre-activation or inhibition of complex tasks in older people has received no sufficient clarification so far. To explore the effects of aging on neural proactive control mechanisms in a dual task. To address this question, the psychological refractory period (PRP) paradigm was used. Two 2-alternative-forced-choice reaction tasks with a predefined order (T1 and T2) signaled by a cue had to be executed simultaneously or consecutively by young (mean age 25.1 years, = 36) and old subjects (mean age 70.4 years, = 118). Performance indices of dual-task preparation were used to assess the focused preparation of T1 and T2. To compare preparatory mechanisms at the neurophysiologic level, multi-channel electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded and negative slow cortical potentials (SCPs) were analyzed as objective markers of the amount and localization of cortical pre-activation before sub-task presentation. Dual-task performance was significantly slower in old adults. T1 performance was facilitated in both age groups, but T2 processing in old adults was not optimized by the temporal structure as efficiently as in young adults. Also, only young adults manifested a stable pattern of focused of negative slow-wave activity increase at medial frontal and right-hemisphere posterior regions, which was associated with a coordinated preparatory T1 pre-activation and T2 deferment, while old adults manifested a broad topographic distribution of negative SCPs associated with a pre-activation of sensory and motor processes. These observations demonstrate that the proactive preparation for dual tasking is altered with aging. It is suggested that in young adults, attention-based pre-activation of working memory and inhibitory networks in the right hemisphere synchronizes the simultaneous preparation of the two sub-tasks, whereas in old adults, sensory and motor networks appear to be non-specifically pre-activated for subsequent deferred mode of processing.
多任务处理能力在老年人中通常会受损。在多任务处理中,子任务的固定顺序可以通过促进子任务的时间结构化准备来提高表现。到目前为止,关于主动控制如何在老年人中优先处理复杂任务的预激活或抑制,尚未得到充分阐明。为了探索衰老对双任务中神经主动控制机制的影响。为了解决这个问题,采用了心理不应期(PRP)范式。年轻(平均年龄25.1岁,n = 36)和老年受试者(平均年龄70.4岁,n = 118)必须同时或连续执行两个由提示信号指示的具有预定义顺序(T1和T2)的二选一强制选择反应任务。使用双任务准备的表现指标来评估对T1和T2的集中准备。为了在神经生理水平上比较准备机制,记录了多通道脑电图(EEG),并分析了负向慢皮层电位(SCPs),作为子任务呈现前皮层预激活量和定位的客观指标。老年人的双任务表现明显更慢。两个年龄组的T1表现都得到了促进,但老年人的T2处理没有像年轻人那样有效地通过时间结构进行优化。此外,只有年轻人在内侧额叶和右半球后部区域表现出负向慢波活动增加的稳定集中模式,这与T1预激活和T2延迟的协调准备有关,而老年人表现出与感觉和运动过程预激活相关的负向SCPs的广泛地形图分布。这些观察结果表明,双任务的主动准备会随着衰老而改变。建议在年轻人中,基于注意力的工作记忆预激活和右半球的抑制网络同步两个子任务的同时准备,而在老年人中,感觉和运动网络似乎被非特异性地预激活,以用于随后的延迟处理模式。