Cabeza R, Grady C L, Nyberg L, McIntosh A R, Tulving E, Kapur S, Jennings J M, Houle S, Craik F I
Rotman Research Institute of Baycrest Centre, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6A 2E1.
J Neurosci. 1997 Jan 1;17(1):391-400. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.17-01-00391.1997.
Positron emission tomography (PET) was used to compare regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in young (mean 26 years) and old (mean 70 years) subjects while they were encoding, recognizing, and recalling word pairs. A multivariate partial-least-squares (PLS) analysis of the data was used to identify age-related neural changes associated with (1) encoding versus retrieval and (2) recognition versus recall. Young subjects showed higher activation than old subjects (1) in left prefrontal and occipito-temporal regions during encoding and (2) in right prefrontal and parietal regions during retrieval. Old subjects showed relatively higher activation than young subjects in several regions, including insular regions during encoding, cuneus/precuneus regions during recognition, and left prefrontal regions during recall. Frontal activity in young subjects was left-lateralized during encoding and right-lateralized during recall [hemispheric encoding/retrieval asymmetry (HERA)], whereas old adults showed little frontal activity during encoding and a more bilateral pattern of frontal activation during retrieval. In young subjects, activation in recall was higher than that in recognition in cerebellar and cingulate regions, whereas recognition showed higher activity in right temporal and parietal regions. In old subjects, the differences in blood flow between recall and recognition were smaller in these regions, yet more pronounced in other regions. Taken together, the results indicate that advanced age is associated with neural changes in the brain systems underlying encoding, recognition, and recall. These changes take two forms: (1) age-related decreases in local regional activity, which may signal less efficient processing by the old, and (2) age-related increases in activity, which may signal functional compensation.
正电子发射断层扫描(PET)被用于比较年轻(平均26岁)和年长(平均70岁)受试者在对单词对进行编码、识别和回忆时的局部脑血流量(rCBF)。采用多变量偏最小二乘法(PLS)对数据进行分析,以确定与(1)编码与检索以及(2)识别与回忆相关的年龄相关神经变化。年轻受试者在编码期间比年长受试者在(1)左前额叶和枕颞区以及(2)检索期间在右前额叶和顶叶区表现出更高的激活。年长受试者在几个区域比年轻受试者表现出相对更高的激活,包括编码期间的岛叶区域、识别期间的楔叶/楔前叶区域以及回忆期间的左前额叶区域。年轻受试者在编码期间额叶活动为左侧化,在回忆期间为右侧化[半球编码/检索不对称(HERA)],而年长成年人在编码期间额叶活动很少,在检索期间额叶激活模式更双侧化。在年轻受试者中,小脑和扣带回区域的回忆激活高于识别激活,而识别在右颞叶和顶叶区域表现出更高的活动。在年长受试者中,这些区域回忆和识别之间的血流差异较小,但在其他区域更明显。综合来看,结果表明高龄与编码、识别和回忆背后的脑系统中的神经变化有关。这些变化有两种形式:(1)与年龄相关的局部区域活动减少,这可能表明老年人处理效率较低;(2)与年龄相关的活动增加,这可能表明功能补偿。