AI Article Synopsis

  • The decline in cognitive performance in older adults is linked to both grey matter processing and white matter integrity, but their relationship isn't fully understood.
  • Researchers studied 91 healthy adults aged 60-80 to see how variations in grey matter function (measured by SDBOLD) relate to cognitive skills like memory and fluid intelligence.
  • They found that better grey matter processing in certain brain regions, along with stronger white matter integrity, is associated with improved cognitive performance, highlighting the importance of dynamic neural processing and interconnectivity in the brain.

Article Abstract

Decline in cognitive performance in old age is linked to both suboptimal neural processing in grey matter (GM) and reduced integrity of white matter (WM), but the whole-brain structure-function-cognition associations remain poorly understood. Here we apply a novel measure of GM processing-moment-to-moment variability in the blood oxygenation level-dependent signal (SDBOLD)-to study the associations between GM function during resting state, performance on four main cognitive domains (i.e., fluid intelligence, perceptual speed, episodic memory, vocabulary), and WM microstructural integrity in 91 healthy older adults (aged 60-80 years). We modeled the relations between whole-GM SDBOLD with cognitive performance using multivariate partial least squares analysis. We found that greater SDBOLD was associated with better fluid abilities and memory. Most of regions showing behaviorally relevant SDBOLD (e.g., precuneus and insula) were localized to inter- or intra-network "hubs" that connect and integrate segregated functional domains in the brain. Our results suggest that optimal dynamic range of neural processing in hub regions may support cognitive operations that specifically rely on the most flexible neural processing and complex cross-talk between different brain networks. Finally, we demonstrated that older adults with greater WM integrity in all major WM tracts had also greater SDBOLD and better performance on tests of memory and fluid abilities. We conclude that SDBOLD is a promising functional neural correlate of individual differences in cognition in healthy older adults and is supported by overall WM integrity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4390282PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0120315PLOS

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