Learning and self-regulation of slow cortical potentials in older adults. 2000

B Kotchoubey, and S Haisst, and I Daum, and M Schugens, and N Birbaumer
Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Neurobiology, University of Tübingen, Germany. boris.kotchoubey@uni-tuebingen.de

Two groups of subjects, aged 20-28 and 50-64, respectively, matched for health status and verbal abilities, learned to control their slow cortical potentials (SCP) in a feedback paradigm by producing, on command, SCP shifts in either positive or negative direction. Both groups were able to differentiate significantly between the positivity task and the negativity task, with the differentiation score being only slightly (and not significantly) lower in older than in younger subjects. In all conditions, however, significantly more negative brain responses were obtained in older than in younger subjects. This effect was larger in the positivity task versus negativity task, and larger in trials without continuous SCP feedback versus trials with feedback. Additionally four learning tasks were carried out with all subjects. The older group demonstrated substantial performance deficits in two tasks with explicit learning (verbal and visual). In contrast, implicit learning (perceptual learning and skill acquisition) was not impaired with age. The results are at odds with the idea of general age-related learning deficit and concur with the hypothesis that only explicit, but not implicit, learning processes are compromised in older subjects. The pattern of consistently more negative SCP shifts produced by elderly subjects may indicate their impaired cortical inhibition. Another interpretation, which does not exclude the inhibitory deficit hypothesis but seems to better agree with other psychophysiological data, may be that older subjects have disturbance in the system controlling arousal and effort.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007858 Learning Relatively permanent change in behavior that is the result of past experience or practice. The concept includes the acquisition of knowledge. Phenomenography
D008297 Male Males
D008568 Memory Complex mental function having four distinct phases: (1) memorizing or learning, (2) retention, (3) recall, and (4) recognition. Clinically, it is usually subdivided into immediate, recent, and remote memory.
D008875 Middle Aged An adult aged 45 - 64 years. Middle Age
D011932 Reading Acquiring information from text.
D011939 Mental Recall The process whereby a representation of past experience is elicited. Recall, Mental
D002540 Cerebral Cortex The thin layer of GRAY MATTER on the surface of the CEREBRAL HEMISPHERES that develops from the TELENCEPHALON and folds into gyri and sulci. It reaches its highest development in humans and is responsible for intellectual faculties and higher mental functions. Allocortex,Archipallium,Cortex Cerebri,Cortical Plate,Paleocortex,Periallocortex,Allocortices,Archipalliums,Cerebral Cortices,Cortex Cerebrus,Cortex, Cerebral,Cortical Plates,Paleocortices,Periallocortices,Plate, Cortical
D004569 Electroencephalography Recording of electric currents developed in the brain by means of electrodes applied to the scalp, to the surface of the brain, or placed within the substance of the brain. EEG,Electroencephalogram,Electroencephalograms
D005074 Evoked Potentials, Visual The electric response evoked in the cerebral cortex by visual stimulation or stimulation of the visual pathways. Visual Evoked Response,Evoked Potential, Visual,Evoked Response, Visual,Evoked Responses, Visual,Potential, Visual Evoked,Potentials, Visual Evoked,Response, Visual Evoked,Responses, Visual Evoked,Visual Evoked Potential,Visual Evoked Potentials,Visual Evoked Responses
D005260 Female Females

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