AI Article Synopsis

  • Older adults, especially those at risk for dementia, show declines in episodic memory linked to changes in brain activity that can be detected using fMRI.
  • A new imaging biomarker called FADE-SAME has been developed to assess memory-related brain activity by evaluating both activations and deactivations during memory tasks, improving upon the original FADE score.
  • In a study comparing young and older adults, both FADE and FADE-SAME scores showed significant age-related differences and correlated with memory performance, suggesting these scores could serve as valuable biomarkers for assessing neurocognitive aging.

Article Abstract

Older adults and particularly those at risk for developing dementia typically show a decline in episodic memory performance, which has been associated with altered memory network activity detectable via functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). To quantify the degree of these alterations, a score has been developed as a putative imaging biomarker for successful aging in memory for older adults (Functional Activity Deviations during Encoding, FADE; Düzel et al., Hippocampus, 2011; 21: 803-814). Here, we introduce and validate a more comprehensive version of the FADE score, termed FADE-SAME (Similarity of Activations during Memory Encoding), which differs from the original FADE score by considering not only activations but also deactivations in fMRI contrasts of stimulus novelty and successful encoding, and by taking into account the variance of young adults' activations. We computed both scores for novelty and subsequent memory contrasts in a cohort of 217 healthy adults, including 106 young and 111 older participants, as well as a replication cohort of 117 young subjects. We further tested the stability and generalizability of both scores by controlling for different MR scanners and gender, as well as by using different data sets of young adults as reference samples. Both scores showed robust age-group-related differences for the subsequent memory contrast, and the FADE-SAME score additionally exhibited age-group-related differences for the novelty contrast. Furthermore, both scores correlate with behavioral measures of cognitive aging, namely memory performance. Taken together, our results suggest that single-value scores of memory-related fMRI responses may constitute promising biomarkers for quantifying neurocognitive aging.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8410542PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hbm.25559DOI Listing

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