Heselton Hyeon Jung, Anderson Aaron T, Johnson Curtis L, Cohen Neal J, Sutton Bradley P, Schwarb Hillary
Center for Brain, Biology and Behavior, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68588, USA.
Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
Brain Sci. 2025 Aug 29;15(9):947. doi: 10.3390/brainsci15090947.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Sequence learning, the ability to pick up on regularities in our environment to facilitate behavior, is critically dependent on striatal structures in the brain, with the putamen emerging as a critical hub for implicit sequence learning. As the putamen is known to shrink with age, and age-related declines in sequence learning abilities are common, it has been hypothesized that the structural integrity of the putamen is likely related to sequence learning outcomes. However, the structural literature is sparse. One reason may be that traditional structural imaging measures, like volume, are not sufficiently sensitive to measure changes that are related to performance outcomes. We propose that magnetic resonance elastography (MRE), an emerging neuroimaging tool that provides quantitative measures of microstructural integrity, may fill this gap.
In this study, both sequence learning abilities and the structural integrity of the putamen were assessed in 61 cognitively healthy middle-aged and older adults (range: 45-78 years old). Sequence learning was measured via performance on the Serial Reaction Time Task. Putamen integrity was assessed in two ways: first, via standard structural volume assessments, and second, via MRE measures of tissue integrity.
Age significantly correlated with both putamen volume and stiffness but not sequence learning scores. While sequence learning scores did not correlate with volume, MRE-derived measures of putamen stiffness were significantly correlated with learning outcomes such that individuals with stiffer putamen showed higher learning scores. A series of control analyses were performed to highlight the specificity and sensitivity of this putamen stiffness-sequence learning relationship.
Together these data indicate that microstructural changes that occur in the putamen as we age may contribute to changes in sequence learning outcomes.
背景/目的:序列学习是指从我们周围环境中识别规律以促进行为的能力,它严重依赖于大脑中的纹状体结构,其中壳核已成为内隐序列学习的关键枢纽。由于已知壳核会随着年龄增长而萎缩,且序列学习能力随年龄增长而下降很常见,因此有人推测壳核的结构完整性可能与序列学习结果有关。然而,关于这方面的结构文献很少。一个原因可能是传统的结构成像测量方法,如体积测量,对测量与行为结果相关的变化不够敏感。我们认为,磁共振弹性成像(MRE)作为一种新兴的神经成像工具,可以提供微观结构完整性的定量测量,可能会填补这一空白。
在本研究中,对61名认知健康的中老年人(年龄范围:45 - 78岁)的序列学习能力和壳核的结构完整性进行了评估。通过序列反应时任务的表现来测量序列学习。壳核完整性通过两种方式进行评估:第一,通过标准的结构体积评估;第二,通过MRE测量组织完整性。
年龄与壳核体积和硬度均显著相关,但与序列学习分数无关。虽然序列学习分数与体积无关,但MRE得出的壳核硬度测量值与学习结果显著相关,即壳核较硬的个体学习分数较高。进行了一系列对照分析以突出这种壳核硬度与序列学习关系的特异性和敏感性。
这些数据共同表明,随着年龄增长,壳核中发生的微观结构变化可能导致序列学习结果的改变。