Festini Sara B, McDonough Ian M
Department of Psychology, University of Tampa, 401 W. Kennedy Blvd., Tampa, FL, 33606, USA.
Department of Psychology, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY, USA.
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2025 Feb;25(1):63-88. doi: 10.3758/s13415-024-01246-0. Epub 2024 Dec 19.
Cognitive reserve (CR) and busyness can boost memory, whereas stress can impair memory. Nevertheless, extant research has not yet examined busyness in conjunction with CR and stress, nor whether CR or stress moderate the relationship between busyness and episodic memory. Middle-aged and older adult participants (N = 71; ages 50-74; 31% African-American) answered lifestyle questionnaires and completed a visual paired-associate memory fMRI task. Dimension reduction techniques identified two latent CR factors-personal CR (own education; occupation complexity; socioeconomic status) and parental education (mother's/father's education), and identified two latent stress factors-external stress (neighborhood stress/violence; financial strain) and personal stress (perceived stress; work/personal stress). We cast these latent factors into a series of regression models, revealing that (1) in isolation, higher busyness predicted better episodic memory, (2) higher external stress predicted worse memory, (3) both greater personal CR and greater parental education predicted better memory, (4) busyness did not interact with stress nor with CR, and (5) in a combined model, higher parental education and lower external stress were significant independent predictors. Neuroimaging data revealed that higher CR was associated with more efficient brain activity in the hippocampus and posterior cingulate during successful episodic memory retrieval, whereas higher personal stress was associated with heightened activity in the precuneus. No interactions or main effects of busyness were observed for the fMRI data. Thus, although busyness was associated with superior episodic memory, busyness did not modulate brain activity during episodic memory retrieval, nor did CR or stress moderate the relationship between busyness and associative memory.
认知储备(CR)和忙碌程度可以增强记忆力,而压力会损害记忆力。然而,现有研究尚未将忙碌程度与认知储备和压力结合起来进行考察,也未探究认知储备或压力是否会调节忙碌程度与情景记忆之间的关系。中年及老年参与者(N = 71;年龄在50 - 74岁之间;31%为非裔美国人)回答了生活方式问卷,并完成了一项视觉配对联想记忆功能磁共振成像(fMRI)任务。降维技术确定了两个潜在的认知储备因素——个人认知储备(自身教育程度;职业复杂性;社会经济地位)和父母教育程度(母亲/父亲的教育程度),并确定了两个潜在的压力因素——外部压力(邻里压力/暴力;经济压力)和个人压力(感知到的压力;工作/个人压力)。我们将这些潜在因素纳入一系列回归模型,结果显示:(1)单独来看,较高的忙碌程度预示着更好的情景记忆;(2)较高的外部压力预示着较差的记忆力;(3)较高的个人认知储备和较高的父母教育程度都预示着更好的记忆力;(4)忙碌程度与压力或认知储备之间没有相互作用;(5)在一个综合模型中,较高的父母教育程度和较低的外部压力是显著的独立预测因素。神经影像学数据显示,在成功进行情景记忆检索时,较高的认知储备与海马体和后扣带回中更高效的大脑活动相关,而较高的个人压力与楔前叶活动增强相关。对于fMRI数据,未观察到忙碌程度的相互作用或主效应。因此,尽管忙碌程度与卓越的情景记忆相关,但忙碌程度在情景记忆检索过程中并未调节大脑活动,认知储备或压力也未调节忙碌程度与联想记忆之间的关系。