|
E-mail this page to a friend!
Senior Citizen Memory Loss Due to Irrelevant
Distractions in Aging Brain
fMRI study confirms brain changes with aging,
provides new diagnostic tool
Sept. 12, 2005 - The short-term memory problems
that accompany normal aging are associated with an inability to filter
out surrounding distractions, not problems with focusing attention,
according to a study by researchers at the University of California,
Berkeley.
| |
Related Stories |
|
| |
Senior Citizens Are Not Rude, Just Have Uninhibited,
Aging Brains
Sept. 9, 2005 If you are a senior citizen and
sometimes wonder why people think you are rude, it may be because you
are. Seniors seem to be prone to this malady, according to new research,
that says changes in brain function as we age may explain our lack of
tact. Read more...
Seniors Try So Hard to Hear They Forget What They
Heard
Aug. 13, 2005 Senior citizens with hearing
problems may try so hard to hear they cant remember what they heard.
That is what a new study by Brandeis University researchers concluded.
Read more...
What Do You Know About the Aging Process?
Many senior citizens are as ill informed about aging as
most younger people
July 15, 2005 - SeniorJournal.com today begins a
series of daily quizzes about the aging process that have been developed
by Roger Hiemstra, Professor, Adult Education, Elmira College and Professor Emeritus,
Instructional Design and Adult Learning, Syracuse University,
Syracuse, NY. Read
more...
Shrinking Brains of Aging Do Not Impact Mental
Abilities: New Study
June 10, 2005 As people pass into their 60s the
brain usually begins to shrink but new research says this shrinkage has
no impact on the individual's capacity to think or learn, which
challenges conventional views.
Read more...
> More news on aging
- Click Here |
|
Although older patients often report difficulty
tuning out distractions, this is the first hard evidence from functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies of the brain that memory
failure owes more to interference from irrelevant information than to an
inability to focus on relevant information.
"Difficulty filtering out distractions impacts a
wide range of daily life activities, such as driving, social
interactions and reading, and can greatly affect quality of life," said
study leader Dr. Adam Gazzaley, adjunct assistant professor of
neuroscience at UC Berkeley and a newly appointed assistant professor of
neurology and physiology at UC San Francisco.
"These results reveal that efficiently focusing on
relevant information is not enough to ensure successful memory," he
said. "It is also necessary to filter distractions. Otherwise, our
capacity-limited short-term memory system will be overloaded."
The finding could mean that an inability to ignore
distracting information is at the heart of many cognitive problems
accompanying aging, Gazzaley said, and suggests that drugs targeting
that problem may be more effective at improving memory than drugs that
improve focusing ability. He now is exploring the therapeutic role of
different medications - including one of the main drugs to treat
Alzheimer's disease - in older individuals with suppression deficits.
Because Gazzaley and his colleagues have identified
areas of the brain that are markers for focusing and ignoring visual
information, fMRI may be a good tool for assessing the value of
therapies designed to improve memory and for diagnosing attention and
memory problems in young and old, ranging from attention deficit
disorder to dementia.
"Is this a unifying mechanism that can account for
broader problems regarding attention and memory?" asked coauthor Dr.
Mark D'Esposito, UC Berkeley professor of neuroscience and psychology
and director of the campus's Henry Wheeler Brain Imaging Center. "I
think it explains a lot of it. If you are unable to block out
distracting information, you can't really attend to what you are
supposed to attend to, you can't get in what you are supposed to
remember, and you have a hard time retrieving what you are supposed to
remember. Rather than think of it as someone having an attention problem
and a memory problem, you can just think of it as someone having one
problem - the inability to filter out distracting information - that's
affecting other domains such as attention and memory."
Gazzaley, D'Esposito, research assistant Jeffrey W.
Cooney and graduate student Jesse Rissman will report their findings in
the journal Nature Neuroscience, to be published online Sept. 11.
Gazzaley and his colleagues compared young adults
aged 19 to 30 with older adults aged 60 to 77 using a simple memory test
that introduced irrelevant information. The tests were conducted while
subjects' heads were inside a fMRI scanner so that activity in the brain
could be pinpointed.
While young subjects were easily able to suppress brain activity in
areas that process information irrelevant to the memory task, older
adults on average were unable to suppress such distracting information.
Both groups were equally able to enhance brain activity in the areas
dealing with information relevant to the task.
Interestingly, six of the 16 older adults had
well-preserved short-term memory and no problems ignoring irrelevant
information, suggesting that some people are able to avoid memory loss
as they age. Gazzaley hopes to find out what makes these people
different from the average aging adult.
"Encouragingly, a subgroup of the older population
does not experience this suppression deficit and accompanying memory
impairment, opening the road for studies of successful aging," Gazzaley
said.
Gazzaley, a neurologist who specializes in treating
mild cognitive impairment common in older adults, set out to see how
attention affects short term or "working" memory. He developed a test to
distinguish two aspects of attention: the brain's ability to focus on a
visual stimulus, and the ability to suppress or ignore other visual
information. He noted that both involve brain activity in the higher
level neocortex, acting on the visual cortex - a process he refers to as
"top-down modulation."
The test involves presenting a sequence of four
images, two of them faces and two natural scenes. Subjects were asked to
remember either faces, in which case the scenes were irrelevant
information; or scenes, in which case faces were irrelevant. Subjects
then were asked whether a particular face or scene appeared among the
four images. In a separate test, subjects were asked only to observe the
stimuli without attempting to remember them.
After first identifying with the fMRI the regions
in the brain attentive to faces and scenes (they differ slightly in each
individual), Gazzaley presented his subjects with the three tests and
recorded brain images in each case.
When asked to remember faces, young adults showed
enhanced activity in the brain area dealing with faces and decreased
activity in the area dealing with scenes (the parahippocampal/lingual
gyrus). Similarly, when asked to remember scenes, they showed enhanced
activity in the scene area of the brain and suppressed activity in the
area dealing with faces.
Older adults, however, while showing comparable
enhancement of the face area when asked to concentrate on faces,
exhibited poor or no suppression of the scene area, and vice versa.
"These data suggest that older individuals are able
to focus on pertinent information, but are overwhelmed by interference
from failing to ignore distracting information, resulting in memory
impairment," the authors wrote.
D'Esposito said that the technique Gazzaley
developed to probe focusing and ignoring ability opens the door to
numerous experiments that could shed light on a popular theory today -
that problems of aging have to do with a decline in the brain's frontal
lobe.
"The frontal lobes are the highest level of
cognition and the area that integrates information from all over the
brain," he said. "If you look at the frontal lobes over time, that is
the area where there is more decline than any other part of the brain."
To shed light on this hypothesis, Gazzaley and
D'Esposito plan to look at patients with known or presumed frontal lobe
damage, to see if they also have problems with focusing or ignoring.
Also, they plan to look at people with attention deficit disorder,
addiction problems, and mild cognitive impairment in search of evidence
that these problems too are due to dysfunction of the frontal lobe.
"There may be unknown lesions in the frontal lobe
that affect attention," Gazzaley said. "Aging is not a disease, but I
think there likely is a problem with top-down control that could be
fixed with drugs."
"If aging is a frontal lobe dysfunction, it is a
mild form of it," D'Esposito said. "And if we learn something about it,
then we may be able to help and know more about patient populations that
have a more severe form of frontal lobe damage, like traumatic brain
injury and strokes and dementia."
About the study:
The work was funded by grants to Gazzaley and
D'Esposito from the National Institute on Aging of the National
Institutes of Health and by the American Federation of Aging Research.
Click to More Senior News on the
Front Page
Copyright: SeniorJournal.com |