Toronto Metropolitan University
Browse
Hippocampus - 2013 - Konishi - Decreased functional magnetic resonance imaging activity in the hippocampus in favor of the.pdf (468.49 kB)

Decreased Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Activity in the Hippocampus in favor of the Caudate Nucleus in Older Adults Tested in a Virtual Navigation Task

Download (468.49 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-25, 20:00 authored by Kyoko Konishi, Nicole Etchamendy, Shumita Roy, Aline Marighetto, M. Natasha RajahM. Natasha Rajah, Véronique D. Bohbot

The neuroimaging literature has shown consistent decreases in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) activity in the hippocampus of healthy older adults engaged in a navigation task. However, navigation in a virtual maze relies on spatial or response strategies known to depend on the hippocampus and caudate nucleus, respectively. Therefore, since the proportion of people using spatial strategies decreases with normal aging, we hypothesized that it was responsible for the observed decreases in fMRI activity in the hippocampus reported in the literature. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of aging on the hippocampus and caudate nucleus during navigation while taking into account individual navigational strategies. Young (N = 23) and older adults (N = 29) were tested using fMRI on the Concurrent Spatial Discrimination Learning Task, a radial task that dissociates between spatial and response strategies (in Stage 2) after participants reached criteria (in Stage 1). Success on Stage 2 requires that participants have encoded the spatial relationship between the target object and environmental landmarks, that is, the spatial strategy. While older adults required more trials, all participants reached criterion. fMRI results showed that, as a group, young adults had significant activity in the hippocampus as opposed to older adults who instead had significant activity in the caudate nucleus. Importantly, individual differences showed that the older participants who used a spatial strategy to solve the task had significant activity in the hippocampus. These findings suggest that the aging process involves a shift from using the hippocampus toward the caudate nucleus during navigation but that activity in the hippocampus is sustained in a subset of healthy older adults engaged in spatial strategies.

History

Language

English

Usage metrics

    Psychology

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC