Aging effects on memory encoding in the frontal lobes. |
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Authors: | Stebbins, Glenn T. Carrillo, Maria C. Dorfman, Jennifer Dirksen, Courtney Desmond, John E. Turner, David A. Bennett, David A. Wilson, Robert S. Glover, Gary Gabrieli, John D. E. |
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Abstract: | Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to compare frontal-lobe activation in younger and older adults during encoding of words into memory. Participants made semantic or nonsemantic judgements about words. Younger adults exhibited greater activation for semantic relative to nonsemantic judgements in several regions, with the largest activation in the left inferior frontal gyrus. Older adults exhibited greater activation for semantic judgments in the same regions, but the extent of activation was reduced in left prefrontal regions. In older adults, there was a significant association between behavioral tests of declarative and working memory and extent of frontal activation. These results suggest that age-associated decreases in memory ability may be due to decreased frontal-lobe contributions to the initial encoding of experience. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | aging memory encoding frontal lobes magnetic resonance imaging |
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