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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
October
Changes in brain, not age,
determine one's ability to focus on task
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
10/26/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Arthur
F. Kramer, a professor of psychology and in the Beckman
Institute, says changes in brain, not age, determine
one's ability to focus on task. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— When it comes to focusing on a task amid distractions, some
folks more than 60 years old are as mentally sharp as 22-year-olds.
Others struggle. Researchers at the Beckman
Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have shed some light on why that is.
Reporting in the current issue of the quarterly journal Psychology and
Aging, the scientists say there is less white matter in the frontal
lobes of those who struggle with focusing. The differences became apparent
through the use of functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) imaging of the
brains of 40 individuals ranging in age from 19 to 87.
“We found that both performance and brain-activation differences
of older good performers and the older poor performers are predicted
by changes in brain structure, specifically by the volume of white matter
connecting the right and left hemispheres of the frontal lobes,”
said Arthur F. Kramer, a professor of psychology.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Stan
J. Colcombe, a research scientist at the Beckman Institute,
is the lead author of a study that found when it comes
to focusing on a task amid distractions, some folks
more than 60 years old are as mentally sharp as 22-year-olds.
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Participants took
part in a “flanker” experiment in which they viewed a line
of five keyboard arrows on a computer screen and reacted by pushing
one of four buttons that corresponded with the direction the center
arrow was pointing. Sometimes the participants would be distracted by
changes in direction by arrows not in the center.
The experiment allowed researchers to study the ability to focus on
important information and inhibit inappropriate information, Kramer
said. Such focusing is important when driving a car, flying a plane
or making a variety of everyday decisions.
Young people and high-functioning older adults tended to call upon tissue
from the right frontal lobe – specifically, the right middle frontal
gyrus – while some older, poorer-scoring participants also activated
tissue in the left hemisphere (left middle frontal gyrus), said lead
author Stan J. Colcombe, a research scientist at the Beckman Institute.
Previous research has shown similar results, followed by assumptions
that other parts of the brain were activated by older people for assistance,
not unlike using a cane to walk, Colcombe said. In this case, however,
fMRI unveiled that the poor-performing over-60 participants were the
ones using both frontal hemispheres. The older participants keeping
pace with the younger group used only the right hemisphere.
Looking at the high-resolution images taken by fMRI by way of a voxel-based
morphometric technique, which provides a 3D view of brain structure,
the scientists examined gray and white matter. Gray matter represents
neurons, or the processing units, while white matter can be thought
of as the wiring that connects neurons.
No significant differences were detected in the gray matter. However,
the poorer-performing older members had dramatically less white matter.
Kramer and Colcombe theorize that the reduced white matter affects inhibition,
the ability to turn off activation in the part of the brain not needed
to complete a task.
“There is an underlying structure that supports these functions,”
Colcombe said. “We know that certain areas within the frontal
lobes of the brain are most active in inhibitory tasks. These areas
shrink with age. We are very interested in how the gray matter, the
local processors, and the white matter – the connecting inside
wires – interact.”
Research in Kramer’s lab conducted in 2003 showed differences
in gray and white matter in parts of the brain involved in decision-making
in older people. Last year, Kramer, Colcombe and colleagues documented
that six months of mild exercise significantly improved brain wiring
and performance.
“I think this new work fits in very well,” Kramer said.
“This was basic research. It didn’t involve an intervention
like fitness training, but we now know that the amount of white matter
can predict how well a person does on a task involving inhibition control.”
Other co-authors on the new paper were Kirk I. Erickson and Paige Scalf,
postdoctoral researchers at the Beckman Institute. The National Institute
of Aging and the Institute for the Study of Aging funded the research.
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